Box office The film grossed $32,856 in its opening weekend in Toronto. By 1995,
Exotica had grossed $1.75 million in Canada, a substantial sum for English-language Canadian cinema.
Exotica was Egoyan's biggest financial success, and has been called his box-office breakthrough.
Critical response received positive reviews for her performance as Christina.
Exotica received positive reviews from critics.
Rotten Tomatoes retrospectively collected 39 reviews and gave the film an approval rating of 95%, with an average rating of 8.3/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "
Exotica simmers with sex and obsession, while successfully doubling as an extreme character study." On
Metacritic, the film holds a
weighted average score of 72 out of 100 based on 25 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Roger Ebert gave the film four stars upon the film's initial release, calling it "a movie labyrinth, winding seductively into the darkest secrets of a group of people who should have no connection with one another, but do". He judged it Egoyan's best film to date and said
Mia Kirshner "combines sexual allure with a kindness that makes her all the more appealing". In 2009, Ebert added the film to his
Great Movies list, calling it a "deep, painful film about those closed worlds of stage-managed lust".
Jonathan Rosenbaum called it "A must-see" and "lush and affecting", praising the score, the set and the camera movements. Leonard Klady, writing for
Variety, called it "a haunting, chilling experience", albeit with an ending that was "anticlimactic, fuzzy and considerably less than a knockout emotional punch".
Entertainment Weekly gave the film a B+, concluding "Like Christina's dance, the movie is a gorgeous tease, an artful promise of something that never quite arrives".
Desson Howe, writing for
The Washington Post, said it "starts off promisingly, but eventually sinks into its own convoluted oblivion".
Peter Travers of
Rolling Stone wrote "
Exotica is Egoyan's most accomplished and seductive film to date", and less flashy than the upcoming
Showgirls (1995) promised to be. B. Ruby Rich of
The Advocate wrote the film is "a jigsaw puzzle of the emotions in which sex spells out whole language of human behavior", and said the cast, including Kirshner and
Don McKellar, "rivet our attention on these characters". Critics complimented use of the song "
Everybody Knows" by
Leonard Cohen. In 2001, Girish Shambu, writing for
Senses of Cinema, said "Atom Egoyan's sad, elegant
Exotica (1994) is at once intimate and remote, concrete and abstract", praising
Bruce Greenwood for "quiet gravity" and
Sarah Polley as "precociously perfect". In 2002, readers of
Playback voted it the seventh greatest Canadian film ever made. In 2012, Jeff Heinrich of the
Montreal Gazette gave the film five stars, calling it "An utterly hypnotic, X-rated art film" with a "haunting score". In 2015,
The Daily Telegraph named
Exotica as one of "the 10 best (and worst) stripper movies", calling Egoyan "a then-wunderkind of Canadian cinema" and noting the film won awards at both Cannes and the
AVN Awards, which are for pornography. In 2001, an industry poll conducted by
Playback named it the fifth best Canadian film of the preceding 15 years.
Accolades At the
1994 Cannes Film Festival,
Exotica won the
FIPRESCI Prize, the first time an English-language Canadian film had won the honour. At the 1994
Genie Awards, the film won eight prizes, including
Best Motion Picture and
Best Director and
Best Original Screenplay for Egoyan. == References ==