Video Calls with Santa
Lifestyle and Entertainment
App
* #1 CHRISTMAS APP IN AMERICA * * TOTALLY UPDATED FOR 2017 * * TOP 100 IN OVER 50 COUNTRIES * * NO...
Hostelworld: Hostels & Hotels
Travel and Lifestyle
App
Recently featured in Huffington Post’s round up of Best Travel Apps. With over 9 million reviews...
Foodictionary :: International Food & Beverage Translator
Food & Drink and Travel
App
Foodictionary is your fast and easy translator for food and beverage terminology. This app has been...
Tides Planner
Navigation and Sports
App
Essential TIDES tool for sailors, divers, canoeists, fishermen, surfers, swimmers, photographers and...
Coyote : navigation, traffic, alerts
Navigation and Travel
App
Coyote is a community app which guides you and alerts you in real time about dangers on the road. ...
CoPilot GPS – Car Navigation
Navigation and Travel
App
Built for you, the driver. CoPilot is always ready to guide you with clear directions, reliable...
Peakhunter Pro: Offline Route Planning with Topo Maps and Global Summit Log
Navigation and Sports
App
2 Free Map Regions: With the purchase of Peakhunter Pro you get 2 Map Regions of your choosing for...
CoPilot HD Europe
Navigation and Travel
App
30% Off | Summer Sale | Limited Time Only Built for you, the driver. CoPilot is always ready to...
Bob Mann (459 KP) rated Call Me by Your Name (2017) in Movies
Sep 29, 2021
What I will admit is that the film is gloriously sun-drenched and atmospheric, set as it is in the countryside around Crema in northern Italy. Shut your eyes and you can almost smell the olive trees and the bolognese simmering on the stove.
You have to hand it to them: the film just reeks of Italian class.
The story, set in 1983, concerns the 17 year-old musical prodigy Elio (Timothée Chalamet, “Lady Bird“, “Interstellar“) who, with his good looks, has the opportunity to seduce his fair share of Italian babes, specifically the gorgeous Marzia (Esther Garrel) who has the hots for him. Although not one to look a gift vagina in the mouth, Elio is sexually conflicted and finds himself increasingly drawn, romantically, to the dashing and cock-sure 24-year old American visitor Oliver (Armie Hammer, “Free Fire“, “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.“): a feeling that is, initially, reluctantly returned.
Love unrequited. Lady in red Marzia (Esther Garrel) – will she be eventually told to get on her bike?
The Oscar-winning screenplay by James Ivory (he of Merchant and Ivory production fame) is rich and deep with lines that roll off the actors’ tongues like syrup. The action also includes the most inappropriate use of foodstuffs since “American Pie” (and presumably that went in the bin afterwards!).
Family times around the dinner table can get exceptionally loud.
The drama is slow and drawn-out, so action-film fans will be asleep within the first 30 minutes. That wasn’t a problem for me…. it is a film in which you can really soak up the atmosphere. And it exquisitely explores the genuine pain of first love.
The pain of first love.
But what I’m afraid I really couldn’t relate to was Elio’s action about half-way through the film. In the main, he acts as a typically introspective and sensitive teenager, slightly awkward and bashful in approaching sexual matters. But then in a pivotal scene he makes a daring move which – to me – seemed completely out of character. This rather threw me, and I never really got my equilibrium back with the movie after that.
Elio and Oliver…. with Elio about to do something out of character.
It’s no doubt a finely crafted film. The sex scenes are beautifully shot and could never be accused of veering towards the pornographic. But I’m honestly not sure it’s a film that gripped me enough to seek it out to watch again in the future. (Sorry CMBYN lovers!)

