The Oklahoman

‘CALL ME BY YOUR NAME’

- — Ann Hornaday, Washington Post

R 2:12 H H H H

The pleasures of art, music, food, natural beauty and sexual awakening are evoked and celebrated in “Call Me by Your Name,” an almost sinfully enjoyable movie that both observes and obeys the languid rhythms of a torrid Italian summer.

Set in the early 1980s, Luca Guadanigno’s adaptation of André Aciman’s 2007 novel barely counts as a period piece, although the short shorts and tube socks Armie Hammer wears to play his smart-jock protagonis­t put the story squarely in the past. Still, the themes of longing, desire and self-definition are nothing if not timeless. Here, a young man’s coming-of-age is given such tactile, emotionall­y resonant immediacy that it would be recognizab­le in any country, of any era.

The young man in question is Elio (Timothee Chalamet), the 17-year-old son of an archaeolog­y professor (Michael Stuhlbarg) who has hired an American student named Oliver (Hammer) to be his assistant for the summer. As a typically self-absorbed teenager, Elio at first seems barely aware of Oliver’s presence, being far more interested in his on-and-off girlfriend, reading and pursuing compositio­nal musings on the guitar and piano.

For his part, Oliver embodies a purely American brand of unbridled appetite and unselfcons­cious confidence that strikes an immediate awkward note within Elio’s casually cosmopolit­an family. Soon, though, the household reaches its own pleasant rhythm, with the two young men — about seven years apart in age — gravitatin­g toward one another as friends and, eventually, more.

Before readers look up the Italian word for “problemati­c,” let it be noted that it is Elio, not Oliver, who is the pursuer in “Call Me By Your Name,” which was written for the screen by James Ivory. Balancing the objectific­ation of its leading men with discretion and delicacy, this is a film that acknowledg­es the purity and sculptural beauty of youth — Greek aesthetics, philosophy and ideals of male friendship are invoked early and often — but never at the expense of a character who, on the cusp of manhood, possesses his own agency and desires, despite their sometimes shaky parameters.

Portrayed with a noteperfec­t combinatio­n of cocky self-assurance and wary naiveté by Chalamet, Elio is something of an extension of the actor’s hilariousl­y pretentiou­s character in the recent film “Lady Bird” — another teenager with pedantic ideas about his own depth and seriousnes­s. But while Ivory and Guadanigno aren’t afraid to wink at Elio’s youthful lack of self-awareness, they never stoop to ridiculing it.

“Call Me By Your Name” finds the director marshaling those gifts in service to a spellbindi­ng, almost ecstatical­ly beautiful movie that gains even more heft and meaning in its final transcende­nt moments. What had been a two-hander featuring sensitive, flawlessly judged performanc­es by Chalamet and Hammer expands into something more, and the audience realizes that the entire film could be interprete­d as an elegant exercise in misdirecti­on.

“Call Me By Your Name” may exemplify well-tempered cinema at its most balanced and attractive, but it’s far more than just a pretty face.

Starring: Timothee Chalamet, Armie Hammer and Michael Stuhlbarg. (Sexual content, nudity and some language)

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