Cast: Armie Hammer, Michael Stuhlbarg, Amira Casar, Timothee Chalamet
Director: Luca Guadagnino
Genre: Drama, Romance
Running Time: 131 minutes
Synopsis: Call Me By Your Name, the new film by Luca Guadagnino, is a sensual and transcendent tale of first love, based on the acclaimed novel by André Aciman.
It's the summer of 1983 in the north of Italy, and Elio Perlman (Timothée Chalamet), a precocious 17- year-old American-Italian boy, spends his days in his family's 17th century villa transcribing and playing classical music, reading, and flirting with his friend Marzia (Esther Garrel).
Elio enjoys a close relationship with his father (Michael Stuhlbarg), an eminent professor specializing in Greco-Roman culture, and his mother Annella (Amira Casar), a translator, who favor him with the fruits of high culture in a setting that overflows with natural delights. While Elio's sophistication and intellectual gifts suggest he is already a fully-fledged adult, there is much that yet remains innocent and unformed about him, particularly about matters of the heart.
One day, Oliver (Armie Hammer), a charming American scholar working on his doctorate, arrives as the annual summer intern tasked with helping Elio's father. Amid the sun-drenched splendor of the setting, Elio and Oliver discover the heady beauty of awakening desire over the course of a summer that will alter their lives forever.
Call Me By Your Name
Release Date: December 26th, 2017
Trailer
I like to think that Call Me By Your Name closes a trilogy of films on desire, together with I Am Love and A Bigger Splash.
Call Me By Your Name is a film intended to sweep over an audience like sunshine. It vividly evokes the feeling of an Italian summer, filled with bike rides, midnight swims, music and art, luscious meals under the sun, and the heady awakening of a 17-year old-boy's first passion. When Elio (Timothée Chalamet) falls for Oliver (Armie Hammer), the charismatic grad student staying at his parents' villa in northern Italy, it sets in motion an experience that will linger with both of them forever. 'I don't want Call Me By Your Name to be perceived as a hyper-intellectualized opus," says director Luca Guadagnino, 'but as a tender love story that affects an audience in an uplifting way. I want it to be like a box of chocolates."
The film is based on the acclaimed first novel by André Aciman, which he wrote in a whirlwind three months. 'I was writing faster than I have ever written in my life," says Aciman. 'It was as if I was in love. The writing took me places I would normally have never dared to go. There are things in the book that I say, -I can't believe I wrote this!' But I did. It just kind of dictated itself to me."
When the book was published in early 2007, it was quickly heralded as a modern classic of the literature of first love, and praised for its stark eroticism (its New York Times review opened with 'This novel is hot.") and the deep emotional impact it had on its readers. Two producers, Peter Spears and Howard Rosenman, read the novel independently, and in 2008 joined forces to produce it. 'I think the novel evokes the sensuality and sexuality and eroticism and anxiety of what a first love is like, in a way that very few other books have," says Rosenman. While the book was embraced by the LGBT community and has become accepted as a landmark of gay literature, it has always transcended barriers. 'It strikes a responsive chord in almost anyone who has read it about the idea of first love and the haunting of first love and the pain of first love, regardless of gender or sexuality," says Spears.
As a longtime friend and admirer of writer/director/producer Luca Guadagnino, Spears reached out to him, but as he was busy with other projects, he could only commit to join them as producer, through his company, Frenesy Films. Years passed as Spears and Rosenman attempted to put the project together with various directors and casts.
In 2014, they brought in legendary writer/director James Ivory (Howards End) to pen a new screenplay and serve as additional producer. One change Ivory made to the novel was to refine the father's profession. 'He was a classics scholar, but you can't just put the camera on somebody thinking or writing," says Ivory. 'So I made him into an art historian/archeologist type." The novel is a memory-piece (Aciman is a noted Proustian scholar), told from the perspective of Elio, but the filmmakers set it in the here and now. 'We wanted to reflect the essence of the book, but that didn't mean doing it literally the same way," says Guadagnino. 'We had to take some routes that were different." While Ivory's original script had a modest amount of voice-over narration, none ended up making it into the final film.
As each summer approached, there were new incarnations of the film that came close to being made, but if an actor or director's schedule shifted, the producers didn't have the luxury of moving to the fall or winter. 'There was just one time every year that it could be shot, and if you missed that window, you had to wait a year to get back on the runway and wait for takeoff," says Spears. Finally, after nine years, Guadagnino carved out a few months before he began shooting Suspiria, so that he could direct the film himself in the summer of 2016.
While the novel is set in Liguria, on the Italian Riviera, the Guadagnino moved the location away from the seaside to the town of Crema in Lombardy where he lives. Knowing the landscape and the way of life as intimately as he did, he felt it illuminated the essence of the Perlman family, intellectuals who expose their son to the world of literature and music and art through summers in a peaceful idyllic setting. 'The Perlmans are really immersed in country life, the very sensual feeling of being part of nature," he says. 'They are like the land, like the trees, like the cows, like the grass, like the flowing water. They are part of everything. And they love and respect the tradition of the cycle of seasons." Says Amira Casar, who plays Annella Perlman: 'What I find so moving about the multilingual Perlmans, is that although they have a love of tradition and the past"they are also resolutely modern. While they are transmitting a strong taste of the classics to Elio in this Garden of Eden, at the same time they are pushing him out to go and experiment and live his life. Most parents tend to put a rein on their kids, and instead they're saying, -Go out there! Live, life is a gift. Live it to the full.' I think both Annella and her husband are very ahead of their time, extremely tolerant forward thinking, and permissive."
Shooting near his home added comfort and simplicity to the process of making the film, not just for himself"'I wanted to indulge in the luxury of sleeping in my own bed""but for the entire production team. Most of the film's locations are in the immediate environs of Crema, and when they were further away, as in Lake Garda (the archeological site) and Bergamo (Elio and Oliver's trip), only an hour and a half's drive. The main location of the Perlman residence was an uninhabited family home in Moscazzano, a few minutes from Crema. Six weeks before production began, the filmmakers, including set decorator Violante Visconti (Luchino's grandniece), gradually layered the place with the kind of furniture, objects, and decoration that might have been accumulated by the Perlman family over a lifetime. As is typical in a Guadagnino film, the house became as important a character as all the other actors, brimming with the authentic sense of real life. 'Every now and then something would appear from Luca's own house," says Spears. 'A plate or a bowl, or something that he somehow knew gave the scene a little more verisimilitude and felt to him like: -This is the Perlman home.'" One alteration to the property for the film was Elio and Oliver's little 'swimming pool," a recreation of a farm animal watering trough common to the area.
As the stage was being set in the Perlman house, the actors began arriving in Crema, where they got apartments, began preparing for their roles and getting to know each other. Timothée Chalamet, who had the most to do, arrived five weeks early. 'I jumped into Italian lessons for an hour and a half a day, piano lessons for an hour and a half a day, guitar lessons for an hour and a half a day and gym workouts three times a week," says Chalamet. While the actor had six years of piano experience and a year of guitar before making the film, he worked with Crema-based composer Roberto Solci to boost his performance to Elio's virtuoso level of play. Although the New York-based actor spent his youthful summers at his grandmother's house in Le Chambonsur-Lignon, France, and had a feeling for what European small town life was like, he knew that the 1980s Italian version would be different. He was able to make friends with a number of young people from Crema who didn't know he was an actor, and looked to Guadagnino for guidance about the period. While Chalamet is fluent in French and was able to understand Italian somewhat, he had no Italian language training before his arrival in Crema. 'Along with the piano, speaking Italian was crucial for me because it was a native tongue for Elio and I wanted to get it down to what it would have been for him," he says.
Hammer arrived shortly after, and Chalamet was one of the first people he met. 'I heard somebody practicing piano, and they said, -Oh, that's Timmy!' and I said -I want to meet him!'" The two actors became inseparable in the weeks leading up to shooting. 'We rode bikes, we listened to music, we talked, we went to meals, we hung out in many of the same places you see us in the movie," says Hammer. After shooting commenced, the two rehearsed their scenes every night before shooting. The intimacy and chemistry that became palpable on screen grew out of the closeness the two actors developed in real life.
A large percentage of the story focuses on the myriad steps forward and backward between Elio and Oliver before their relationship finally becomes physical. Stressing anticipation through an unhurried buildup is common in Guadagnino's films. 'I like a slow burn," he says. Says Chalamet: 'It's the universally relatable game of cat and mouse and push and pull that occurs between people that are attracted to one another but have suspicions and insecurities about whether the other holds the same level of attraction. They also have trepidations because they aren't in a time period or a location that is accepting or encouraging of them having an intimate relationship." For producer Spears, Guadagnino's measured pace is key to the way the film engages the senses. 'There's an American tendency, whether it's in movies or TV, to race to the finish line. But Luca slows the pace down and makes you experience everything"the smell, the sound, the touch, the taste. When you connect with all of those things, you're really going to feel it and you're not going to forget it."
A good example of Guadagnino's approach is a scene where Elio and Oliver stop for a drink of water while they are out biking. As this serves no obvious narrative purpose, it is the kind of sequence a different filmmaker might have cut. 'This was one of our favorite scenes," says editor and longtime Guadagnino collaborator Walter Fasano. 'First, because it evoked the typical lounging and easy and lazy feeling of old summers in the 80s. And second, that particular moment reminded us of moments in Bertolucci's '1900," which was shot in the same geographical area. Obviously when you deal with these kind of things, you must be very careful not to be self-indulgent, because you can be. At the same time, when you rush, you are losing something."
All the actors lived in Crema and were able to absorb the unique charms and rhythms of Lombardian small town life. 'There is a peace there that one who lives as I do in a metropolitan city rarely gets," says Michael Stuhlbarg, who plays Mr. Perlman. 'It's very much a walking place, because there are few, if any, cars that go riding around the city. It casts a very special spell." Guadagnino often invited the cast and filmmakers into his home where he cooked elaborate meals and showed films. 'He's a great cook, Luca, and we'd share these delicious feasts," says Casar. 'It made us all closer. There can be inner fear and apprehension that we actors can have as we approach our roles, and Luca created a sensorial atmosphere of trust and joy between us, so that we really were able to tap into that intimacy, let sensations flow as we did our scenes." Says Hammer: 'Luca was able to introduce an element of la dolce vita that doesn't really exist in Italy anymore. Working on the movie, being with all these people who I honestly fell in love with, was incredibly analogous to the story of the movie for me. When I look back on it, it's my love affair with making the movie."
Call Me By Your Name
Release Date: December 26th, 2017
Trailer
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