Baltimore Sun

Actor feels ‘it’s tough to be alive now’

- By Lindsey Bahr

Timothee Chalamet was feeling cut off from the world in the early days of the pandemic.

Then Luca Guadagnino, whom Chalamet saw as a father figure while filming “Call Me By Your Name,” called with a new possible project. It would be another young romance set in the 1980s. But instead of Italy, they’d be going to the American Midwest. And they’d be cannibals.

The film, “Bones and All,” recently had its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival.

It’s a significan­t departure for the Italian director of films like “A Bigger Splash” and “I Am Love,” marking the first time Guadagnino has made an American film — something he has wanted to do for some time. His longtime collaborat­or, screenwrit­er David Kajganich, came to him with an adaptation of Camille DeAngelis’ young adult novel, and he saw in it an opportunit­y to make a film about identity and outcasts.

“I was dying to work with Luca again and tell a story that was grounded,” said Chalamet.

In “Bones and All,” Chalamet did more than just act: He helped take his character Lee from an “alpha jock” to a “broken soul,” which he said was very attractive to him, and got a producing credit on the film as well.

“Luca is fatherly with me and guided me in that process this time,” he said. “I can’t say that I was helpful organizing schedules or anything like that. But it’s something I want to continue doing.”

Chalamet’s character is a supporting part to the film’s lead Maren, who is coming to terms with her unsavory urges. She’s played by “Waves” actor Taylor Russell, a

newcomer to the Guadagnino family of regulars such as Michael Stuhlbarg, as a creepy cannibal they meet on the road, and Chloe Sevigny.

“It’s Taylor’s movie, she does an incredible job carrying it,” Chalamet said.

Discussing their characters recently in Venice, and the loneliness they feel in the world, led both to think about what it means to be young at the moment.

“Can’t imagine what it is to grow up with the onslaught of social media,” Chalamet said. “I think it’s tough to be alive now. I think societal collapse is in the air. It smells like it. And without being pretentiou­s, I hope that’s why these movies matter, because the role of the artist is to shine a light on what’s going on.”

Russell added that, “It’s so scary. The hope is that you can find your own compass within all of it.”

The film also features a new score by Trent Reznor

and Atticus Ross, whom Guadagnino challenged to “find the sound of a road trip” and “the sound of the American landscape.”

And it’s full of 1980s music from Joy Division, New Order and even Kiss, which were chosen from a box of cassette tapes that Kajganich found from when he was a teenager.

“The ones that either made me smile or cry made it in the script,” Kajganich said.

“Bones and All” opens in North American theaters on Nov. 23.

Sept. 5 birthdays: Actor Bob Newhart is 93. Actor William Devane is 83. Actor George Lazenby is

83. Actor Raquel Welch is 82. Singer Al Stewart is

77. Singer Loudon Wainwright III is 76. Actor Michael Keaton is 71. Actor Debbie Turner is 66. Singer Terry Ellis is 59. Actor Rose McGowan is 49. Actor Carice Van Houten is 46.

 ?? JOEL C RYAN/INVISION ?? Timothee Chalamet, who plays Lee in “Bones and All,” is seen Sept. 2 at the Venice film festival.
JOEL C RYAN/INVISION Timothee Chalamet, who plays Lee in “Bones and All,” is seen Sept. 2 at the Venice film festival.

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