Call Me By Your Name reviewed by Clarisse Loughrey

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
  • Clarisse Loughrey reviews Call Me By Your Name. The son of an American professor and the graduate student who comes to stay with his family share a passionate summer together in 1983.
    Please tell us what you think of the film -- or Clarisse’s review of the film - below. We love to include your views on the show every Friday.
    www.bbc.co.uk/5...
    Fridays at 2pm on BBC 5 live.

Комментарии • 50

  • @gmimer
    @gmimer 4 года назад +21

    I have never been affected so much by a movie. It was a great movie until 15 minutes from the end. It then became a masterpiece. His father's speech, the phone call and of course Timmy on the end titles. I can imagine the top actors today watching that ending and thinking "I could not have done that". I've just finished the book. Beautiful and moving just like the film.

  • @dominic9983
    @dominic9983 6 лет назад +50

    A grasp at something uncynical and truly heartbreaking, a soundtrack you want to hear over and over again and performances which make you follow every twitch of the eye. Truly astounding, I can’t imagine who wouldn’t like this film.

  • @davidmitchell-baker1701
    @davidmitchell-baker1701 6 лет назад +104

    Saw this at the London Film Festival a couple of weeks ago, believe the hype - it's spectacular

    • @hackingfider6888
      @hackingfider6888 6 лет назад

      Call Me by Your Name Movie Available in hd Quality
      Stream Now t.co/v1ViuscsHe

  • @ant3605
    @ant3605 6 лет назад +66

    Saw it at a preview last week and I've not got over it yet. Brilliant film based on a brilliant novel.
    The reviewer didn't mention the soundtrack that really adds to the (already) emotional depth of the film, Sufjan Stevens' original songs are stunning.

  • @woody5551
    @woody5551 6 лет назад +16

    I love your take on this movie. Great review.
    Elio (in the book) questioned his own impulses including his want for this handsome academic from America. He was somewhat socially awkward. The movie tried to capture that. For example, how he repeated 4 times at the monument that he doesn't know anything about the things that matter and tells Oliver. You know what things. Then explains "Because I thought you should know," and then "Because I wanted you to know?". And then to himself two more times to make sense in his own head what he was trying to say and really questions and doubts himself about what he had just tried to express to Oliver.

  • @jaspreetisdabest
    @jaspreetisdabest 6 лет назад +26

    Me and the other people in the screening for this movie were all crying together

  • @michaelz9892
    @michaelz9892 5 лет назад +8

    Best film of the past few years and the best romance in a decade.

  • @buddy605
    @buddy605 6 лет назад +17

    Call me by your name and I'll call you by 'mine'

  • @bazzoman510
    @bazzoman510 6 лет назад +8

    A beautiful movie.It deserves to be seen,time and time again.

  • @MegaMajestics
    @MegaMajestics 6 лет назад +42

    Completely overwhelmed me stunning film.

  • @212Michael
    @212Michael 6 лет назад +6

    I cried more during this movie for so many reason, cried more so during this one then every other film combined.

  • @EBBsk8Norge
    @EBBsk8Norge 6 лет назад +6

    Absolutely great review, I agree with everything Clarisse said! Especially the comment on the camera angles and the 2 minute speech by the dad at the end

  • @65g4
    @65g4 3 года назад +3

    Loved the film and im reading the novel now

  • @sanyrub
    @sanyrub 6 лет назад +7

    The season has been dry so far. So this film is truly looking like the one leading awards season.

  • @YourLoyalDeserter
    @YourLoyalDeserter 6 лет назад +35

    She's great. Fantastic critic.

    • @sadiegallant-holloway7950
      @sadiegallant-holloway7950 6 лет назад +4

      Yeah she did bring up something interesting too about Elio's desire to be more like Oliver and it's impact on how he sees himself

    • @eduardomartinez467
      @eduardomartinez467 6 лет назад

      tg72211 no me w

  • @077di6
    @077di6 6 лет назад +2

    Love this movie a lot

  • @tornari
    @tornari 6 лет назад +6

    Great review by Clarisse. Looking forwards to checking out the film.

  • @xamxamdelasalas2173
    @xamxamdelasalas2173 6 лет назад +3

    Its modern setting is nut quite visible which denotes a classic 16th century reign. Its an elite life for erudites in their history yet quite liberal in cloister or hidden whims, sodomy like which i have immediately discerned. This is an excellent 20th century movie i am pretty sure. A trend of rome and greek in humanity.

    • @mcmanpa
      @mcmanpa 6 лет назад

      +Xamxam De Las Alas How else to get Heraclitus into the story without at least one character being erudite?

  • @havingaparty21
    @havingaparty21 6 лет назад

    "Call me by your name and I'll call you by mine."

  • @voozoo1606
    @voozoo1606 6 лет назад

    THE PERLMAN FAMILY LIVE(s) IN THAT VILLA DURING THEIR SUMMER AND WINTER BREAKS !!

  • @Dee010s
    @Dee010s 6 лет назад +1

    Ive read the book which i found too wordy for me like dickens work.. Great story too much description. Ill prob watch the movie on dvd. Just saying. They look lovely so far.

    • @TheWindsofWonder
      @TheWindsofWonder 6 лет назад +4

      Dee 1955 But the descriptions are what makes this story great. I found myself crying from the descriptions about Elio’s internal emotions, not necessarily about a particular event.

    • @Dee010s
      @Dee010s 6 лет назад

      TheWindsofWonder i see. Well for me i dont see or hear all that background emotion in a movie only whats said or on their faces. Some people like one i like the other i guess. Guess im big into visuals and what they make me feel from that.

    • @tangofoxtrot40
      @tangofoxtrot40 6 лет назад +1

      I opted for the audiobook. Only problem is I have to quickly pause when I catch feels 😂

  • @alextromagnetic
    @alextromagnetic 6 лет назад +31

    Get her to replace Mark when he's out on holiday from now on please, not Robbie.

  • @sachinreddy2836
    @sachinreddy2836 6 лет назад +1

    She's isn't as good as mark

  • @andyg9835
    @andyg9835 6 лет назад +10

    I thought 'Call Me By My Name' was very much an atmospheric piece with pretty good cinematography and a thoughtful soundtrack. However, where it fell down was quite a thin plot and weak characterisation that struggled to carry the film. It probably was a story better suited to the source novel, because what I got came across a bit portentous, moralising and navel-gazing. I felt that the film needed extensive reworking to make it more cinematic and probably cut a good 30 minutes from the runtime in the process. Certainly a film attempting to be Oscar bait, but it didn't really work for me. Not all good novels make good films. 2/5

    • @tangofoxtrot40
      @tangofoxtrot40 6 лет назад +10

      Andy G wow a "movie critic" writing his review on the comments section in youtube nonetheless. And he even has a grading system! Wow look at the state of you!

    • @garyabbot4659
      @garyabbot4659 6 лет назад +2

      Soul Munk Did he touch a nerve?

    • @masseysmoviemadness1411
      @masseysmoviemadness1411 6 лет назад +2

      I agreed with him 100% - as does my brother who's a published film reviewer and used to write for various magazines. Just because someone comments on RUclips doesn't make them wrong.

    • @mcmanpa
      @mcmanpa 6 лет назад +7

      +Andy G Yes, very much an atmospheric piece because the atmosphere, a heady combination of place and season, was a character almost of its own: the parallels couldn’t be missed of these two young men (Armie Hammer for me looked too old for the part) and the ripening fruit in the family orchard in the increasing heat of the summer. Director Guadagnino cinematically picked up where he had left off in the verdant mountain scenes of “I Am Love”; the two films are companion pieces, to my mind, in their depiction of love erupting/blooming. But I disagree the film could be shortened, ironical though that may be; the story is in the time it takes the two characters to realise their desire for each other - the slow dance around each other makes their mutual discovery of each other the more potent, the more consuming, the more compelling. (And btw, I thought James Ivory’s reduction of the book from its 20 years to just the one summer is one of several keys to the film’s success.)

    • @kyleroberts8823
      @kyleroberts8823 6 лет назад +2

      What film were you watching? Not this one.

  • @DisappearingBoy2010
    @DisappearingBoy2010 6 лет назад +9

    I just threw up in my mouth