Call Me by Your Name
"Call me by your name and I’ll call you by mine” A delicate and fleeting love story told under sunlight, filtered through apertures in the tree canopies of rural Northern Italy, the cinematography is paired with some beautiful contributions from Sufjan Stevens. Graduate student Oliver joins Mr Pelman and his family over the summer of 1983 to assist with the professor’s academic research. What starts as disdain between Oliver and Mr Pelman’s son, Elio, penetrates first impressions and light brushes as they grow deeper into each other (17 and 24 btw…). Elio’s father delivers such a wise and deeply compelling monologue about the value of emotion, just touching the surface of many takeaways from this film. With over 800 thousand 5-star ratings on Letterboxd, Call Me By Your Name finds relatability in a million different ways, from a realistic and refreshing portrayal of familial relationships to self-conflict around what you should want and what you do want. After all, is it better to speak or to die? Cicadas in the sticky blue night and rustic bicycle bells, Call Me by Your Name offers an unparalleled summer aesthetic, a reminder of the freedom that awaits us the sweeter side of exam season (peachy!). Someone once asked, ‘do you think Armie Hammer is jealous that Timothée went on to star in Bones and All?’. Something to consider.
Holly Beaumont
Apricot trees. Ringing pianos and indistinct family chatter. Trails of cigarette smoke. Childish laughter and bicycle bells. Chirping birds and old stone fountains. A gentle blanket of sun soaks the leaves. It’s summer, 1983. Seventeen-year-old Elio finds himself drawn to Oliver, his father’s research assistant from America who has travelled to Elio’s family home in Northern Italy.
As the soothing, lazy summer warmth oozes through the screen, we’re made privy to a tantalising dynamic of knowing glances, loaded dialogue and subtle touches that culminates into a relationship that forces Elio to come to terms with both his youth and his sexuality. The soft charm of their suburban European chic breeds this breezy dolce vita that serves as a gorgeous lens through which to view such a delicate relationship. It’s a warming, sensual screenplay that it takes its time and never decides to bite off more than it can chew, and yet it remains a focused narrative. Timmy gives a knockout performance, but looking beyond that, Call Me by Your Name still finds itself as one of the most tender and potent films of its generation – a modern classic worthy of its reputation as a touching, sobering take on young queer romance.
Sebastian SmithUnquestionably one of the best films of 2017, Luca Guadagnino’s Call Me by Your Name evades the most conventional definitions. It is a coming-of-age story, a story of self-discovery, the story of the erotic and romantic relationship between the two main young characters – Elio and Oliver –, but it is also much more. Other than an obvious triumph for the queer community, with an almost certain Oscar nomination, following the steps of the Jenkin’s 2016 gem Moonlight, Call Me by Your Name is a hymn to the uniqueness of the human ability to feel. The final speech by Mr. Perlman (Michael Stuhlbarg), Elio’s father, will easily become one of the most iconic and unforgettable monologues in the history of modern cinema: a poignant and moving anthem to human fragility and to the marvel of the pure, unsuppressed experience of emotions.
The film, set in northern rural Italy in the 1980s, ensures that the audience is completely absorbed by its setting: it is not set in the stereotypical, outrageously colourful 80s that we are used to see on the big screen, but in the 80s of daily life. Many of the costumes and set decorations come from the actors and crew’s own homes and wardrobes (peep at Guadagnino’s own ‘50s dishes), or local stores, allowing for an even deeper secret intimacy between the characters and the setting.
The soundtrack, consisting of 80s Italian and international tunes, piano arrangements of classical pieces and singer-songwriter Sufjan Steven’s original songs, acts as a companion to the audience, taking us by our hands and carrying us on the same emotional journey of the two protagonists. With a cinematographically simple, yet extraordinarily powerful closing scene, which ends the film on a melancholic note, it is hard to find a flaw in Guadagnino’s most recent film. The perfect example of a probable future classic, and consequently a must-watch.
Marta Meazza
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Screenings of this film:
| 2017/2018 Spring Term – (digital) |
| 2022/2023 Summer Term – (digital) |
| 2022/2023 Summer Term – (digital) |
| 2025/2026 Summer Term – (digital) |
| 2025/2026 Summer Term – (digital) |