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Luca Guadagnino on CALL ME BY YOUR NAME
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"Call Me by Your Name" wins Best Adapted Screenplay at the 90th Oscars
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James Ivory on CALL ME BY YOUR NAME
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TIMOTHÉE CHALAMET wins Best Male Lead at the 2018 Film Independent Spirit Awards
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CALL ME BY YOUR NAME's Peach Scene: Book vs. Film
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Getting intimate with Timothée Chalamet and Armie Hammer
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Play That Again
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What Would Be The Harm In That
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Truce
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NYFF Live: Making 'Call Me by Your Name'
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NYFF55 Press Conference
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'Call Me by Your Name' Director Luca Guadagnino on His Definition of Cinema
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TIFF 2017 Press Conference
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Written on September 15, 2017
The performances in this are so mesmerizing. I've never liked Armie Hammer as much as I like him in this. He really embodies his character and it's a lived in, fully realized performance. Timothée Chalamet - who has a great year ahead of him with other big projects - is absolutely captivating as the young lead in this coming-of-age tale. I've seen many a coming-of-age film, but this one is one of the truest portrayals of a gay youth coming to terms with his sexuality, emotions, and his own body.
There are so many phenomenal scenes, but the one that stands out above the rest - and the one that made me cry in a theatre full of festivalgoers - is Michael Stuhlbarg's final monologue. It's one of the most honest and real moments I've seen in any film and one of the best father and son moments too. Crossing my fingers so hard that this becomes a huge critical darling and garners some attention come awards time (specifically for Guadagnino, Ivory, Chalamet, and Stuhlbarg).
Oh, and bonus points for that final shot of Chalamet's face as the credits roll. It's the best of its kind since Glazer's _Birth_ in 2004 when Nicole Kidman shattered all of our souls. Chalamet does the same thing here and it's overwhelmingly stunning.
























































