About Call Me by Your Name
Set against the sun-drenched backdrop of 1983 Lombardy, Italy, 'Call Me by Your Name' is a breathtakingly intimate coming-of-age romance that captures the fleeting beauty of first love. Directed with exquisite sensitivity by Luca Guadagnino, the film follows 17-year-old Elio (Timothée Chalamet) as he navigates a transformative summer at his family's villa, where his father's American intern, Oliver (Armie Hammer), arrives and changes everything.
The film unfolds with a languid, sensual pace that mirrors the Italian summer heat, allowing the relationship between Elio and Oliver to develop through stolen glances, intellectual conversations, and unspoken longing. Guadagnino's direction is masterful in its restraint, using the lush setting—from sunlit orchards to ancient villas—as an emotional landscape. The performances are extraordinary: Chalamet delivers a career-defining portrayal of adolescent vulnerability and desire, while Hammer brings a compelling mix of confidence and guarded emotion to Oliver. Their chemistry is palpable and heartbreakingly real.
What makes 'Call Me by Your Name' essential viewing is its profound emotional honesty. It doesn't just tell a love story; it immerses you in the sensory experience of longing, memory, and loss. The screenplay, adapted from André Aciman's novel, is poetic yet grounded, and Michael Stuhlbarg's supporting role as Elio's perceptive father provides one of cinema's most moving monologues. With a haunting score by Sufjan Stevens and cinematography that feels like a warm embrace, this is a film that lingers long after the credits roll. Watch it for a reminder of how love, in all its forms, can shape us forever.
The film unfolds with a languid, sensual pace that mirrors the Italian summer heat, allowing the relationship between Elio and Oliver to develop through stolen glances, intellectual conversations, and unspoken longing. Guadagnino's direction is masterful in its restraint, using the lush setting—from sunlit orchards to ancient villas—as an emotional landscape. The performances are extraordinary: Chalamet delivers a career-defining portrayal of adolescent vulnerability and desire, while Hammer brings a compelling mix of confidence and guarded emotion to Oliver. Their chemistry is palpable and heartbreakingly real.
What makes 'Call Me by Your Name' essential viewing is its profound emotional honesty. It doesn't just tell a love story; it immerses you in the sensory experience of longing, memory, and loss. The screenplay, adapted from André Aciman's novel, is poetic yet grounded, and Michael Stuhlbarg's supporting role as Elio's perceptive father provides one of cinema's most moving monologues. With a haunting score by Sufjan Stevens and cinematography that feels like a warm embrace, this is a film that lingers long after the credits roll. Watch it for a reminder of how love, in all its forms, can shape us forever.


















