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Terry GilliamDecember 8, 2009
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Henry SelickNovember 18, 2009
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Jane CampionSeptember 14, 2009
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Judd ApatowJuly 22, 2009
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Harold RamisJune 12, 2009
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Eric Schlosser, Alice Waters + Food, Inc. PanelJune 4, 2009
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Sam Mendes + John KrasinskiJune 2, 2009
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Pete DocterMay 19, 2009
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Gael Garcia Bernal + Diego LunaMay 6, 2009
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Jim JarmuschApril 23, 2009
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Robert Downey, Sr.April 19, 2009
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James TobackApril 6, 2009
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Greg Mottola, Ted Hope + Anne CareyMarch 22, 2009
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Dennis HopperDecember 4, 2008
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Jerry Lewis + Peter BogdanovichNovember 22, 2008
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Saturday Night Live and Presidential Politics PanelSeptember 15, 2008
Atom Egoyan March 12, 1995
In Canadian director Atom Egoyan's early films, such as Family Viewing and Speaking Parts, technology—in the form of home video and surveillance cameras—played a key role in his complex, multilayered storylines. Yet as his career progressed, it became clear that Egoyan was less interested in the workings of technology than with tangled nature of familial and personal relationships in the modern world. In 1995, Egoyan spoke at the Museum after the release of his breakthrough film Exotica, and discussed the formal themes as well as the deeply personal concerns of his films, including voyeurism, memory, obsession, and intimacy.