For days now, Iâve struggled to figure out where to begin in communicating my thoughts on Call Me by Your Name. Itâs not as though thereâs any shortage of things to laud about director Luca Guadagninoâs delivery to this yearâs Sundance Film Festival. I could speak to no end about how he milks the filmâs Northern Italian village setting not only for every last ounce of aesthetic beauty, but also for a warmth and spirit thatâd cause envy from any of us confined to the margins of the real world. I could go on and on about the startling humanity conveyed through young star Timothée Chalamet’s every verbal snap and abrupt corporeal whip. I could probably even manage a few hundred words on the sexual vivacity of the movieâs fruit spread. But these many willing prompts aside, my stunted progress in beginning this review derived from the challenge of articulating exactly what this film had to say to me.
Part of that difficulty is owed to the specificity of Call Me by Your Nameâs message. Thatâs not to call it exclusive, as proved by post-viewing conversations with dozens of decidedly moved friends and fellow critics lucky enough to have seen the film at Sundance. Still, this generosity of reach is made something near miraculous given how acutely familiar the movie felt to my own personal emotional experience. Not only does Call Me by Your Name so vividly communicate ideas Iâd never before seen executed on film, but that Iâve barely ever been able to put into words myself.
Much of this is carried out by way of the romance that blossoms between Elio (Chalamet), a winningly snide 17-year-old bookworm holed up in an early ’80s Italian Riviera paradise with his American father and Italian mother, and Oliver (Armie Hammer), an archaeology student who drops in on the family to play their summertime houseguest and academic apprentice to Elio’s professor pops (Michael Stuhlbarg).
This relationship, one the two young men can only deny for so long before breaching their respective emotional and hormonal breaking points, affords Elio his first great love story, complete with all the highs and lows innate to such a superlative. From longing to fulfillment and back again, Guadagnino renders every new moment for Elio and Oliverâevery boyish flirtation or reluctant examination of a bare kneeâthe discovery of a lifetime. Between endeavors in withheld affection and mollified yearnings shared with Oliver, whom Hammer paints with two coats of cocksure only to peel them away in pieces, Elio finds more and more of himself and his own story.
But perhaps the most important chapters of Elio are told in his inevitable isolation. Elio discovers just as many questions in and beyond his new romance as he does answers. As succinctly in tune with the majesty of anguish as he is with that of elation, Guadagnino deals Elioâs confusion, his every mortifying inconsistency of heart and libido, those same allowances of empathy and beauty. What came, for me, of this union of Guadagnino’s philocalist eye and Chalamet’s vibrantly human form, of this devotion to Elioâs upending inability to write his own story, was the validation of one I knew all too well. One, though, that Iâd never seen or heard told, and that Iâm still not entirely sure I know how to tell. But here goes nothing.
We donât see many movies that cap at confusion, that are satisfied to leave viewers treading without sight of either horizon. And because of that, those of us who spend our lives in this indefinable grey areaâlanding someplace between gay and straight, or sexually driven and asexual, or cis and trans, or male and femaleâmay feel as though weâre coming up shy of otherwise obvious answers. Trust me on this: Itâs very fucking frustrating.
But seeing in Elio this desperation for any shore to climb aboard, and hearing from Guadagnino that such is a pain as valid and romantic and beautiful as any the big screen is accustomed to spotlighting, felt like I was catching glimpse of what Iâd always sought. Not just the validation, but the celebration of stories like mine: of people who canât figure out who or what theyâre supposed to like, date, sleep with, look like, call themselves, or be. People like me, who wear makeup and are attracted to everyone but go out with no one and havenât figured out what pronouns to use. Frustrations will abound, of that Iâm sure. But seeing my story onscreenâcommitted with the utmost beauty, humanity, and sexualityâis a big step in figuring out how to tell it myself.
Images: Sundance Institute
Michael Arbeiter is the East Coast Editor of Nerdist. Find Michael on Twitter @MichaelArbeiter.