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    Movie Review

    Call Me by Your Name steams up the holiday movie season

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 20, 2017 | 1:35 pm
    Call Me by Your Name steams up the holiday movie season
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    It’s been a long time since 89-year-old James Ivory has made an impact on the filmmaking world, but that’s about to change with Call Me by Your Name. Ivory and his producing partner, Ismail Merchant, were an independent movie force in the 1980s and ‘90s, but Ivory had not written a script since 2003’s The Divorce. Now he and director Luda Guadagnino have teamed up for one of the most acclaimed movies of the year.

    Oliver (Armie Hammer) is an American graduate student who goes to Italy to stay with Professor Perlman (Michael Stuhlbarg) and his family while he writes his thesis in summer 1983. Perlman has a 17-year-old son, Elio (Timothee Chalamet) who, like the rest of the family, becomes enthralled with the newcomer.

    Oliver and Elio both make shows of pursuing girls, but it’s clear that their interest lies more in each other. Without ever speaking of their affection, they acknowledge the difficulty of pursuing a romantic relationship, while still circling each other throughout the summer.

    Guadagnino and Ivory move the film at a languid pace, taking a lot of time for the audience to get know the characters. They do so by using a technique unfamiliar to most American moviegoers, stitching together many small scenes instead of proper full scenes, giving the audience the flavor of the characters but rarely going into depth for any of them.

    In fact, neither Oliver nor Elio actually vocalizes an attraction to the other until over an hour into the film, and even then, it’s with coded words. Ivory has the ability to say a lot even when the characters are saying very little. Guadagnino aids the dialogue with shots that linger on the actors and the countryside, the perfect backdrop for the movie's sensuality.

    Though the film takes a long time to develop their relationship through words, it wastes no time showing why the attraction would build. Both characters seem to be allergic to clothing, going shirtless for much of their time onscreen. And when they finally get together, the love scenes are enough to make anyone blush.

    Still, the story, based on the book by Andre Aciman, remains stuck in the same kind of limbo as most mainstream films depicting gay relationships. Though Elio’s parents appear to be open minded, Oliver and Elio still hide their summer romance and know that they likely have no future. When a gay relationship is allowed to progress like any heterosexual one, that will truly signal a shift in storytelling.

    The performances of Hammer and Chalamet make the movie what it is. Hammer could rely on his face and body to sell Oliver’s sexiness, but he also oozes confidence and charm, making Oliver irresistible. Chalamet, whose breakout year also includes Lady Bird and the upcoming Hostiles, plays the innocent Elio in a highly believable manner. You can’t help but sympathize with his feelings of confusion and desire.

    The structure and slow pace of Call Me by Your Name make it a bit of a test, but the reward of the central relationship make every minute of the film worth your time.

    Timothée Chalamet and Esther Garrel in Call Me by Your Name.

    Timoth\u00e9e Chalamet and Esther Garrel in Call Me By Your Name
    Photo by Luca Campri, Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics
    Timothée Chalamet and Esther Garrel in Call Me by Your Name.
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    Movie Review

    Robert Pattinson and Zendaya face pre-marriage jitters in The Drama

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 3, 2026 | 3:00 pm
    Robert Pattinson and Zendaya in The Drama
    Photo courtesy of A24
    Robert Pattinson and Zendaya in The Drama.

    Robert Pattinson and Zendaya will be seen together a lot at the movies in 2026, with mega-films like The Odyssey and Dune: Part Three coming out later in the year. But fans can get a much more intimate look at the two stars in a film that offers a unique take on relationship struggles, The Drama.

    Emma (Zendaya) and Charlie (Pattinson) are a New York couple who are engaged to be married. After a quick-but-effective montage of their courtship, the story joins them as they are just days away from their wedding. As they get all the details like music, flowers, and food finalized, a visit to the caterer with married friends Rachel (Alana Haim) and Mike (Mamoudou Athie) proves fateful.

    A few too many drinks leads to each member of the group deciding to divulge the worst thing they’ve ever done. While each story is slightly shocking, Emma’s takes the cake, so much so that Charlie starts to question their relationship. As they get closer to the wedding date, Charlie finds it increasingly difficult to get beyond Emma’s revelation, with each real or imagined conversation threatening to derail their previously tight bond.

    Written and directed by Kristoffer Borgli, the film is provocative, funny, and cringey as it tries to get to the center of human dynamics. Charlie, Rachel, and Mike have starkly different reactions to Emma’s story, and the way those play out over the course of the film provides, well, the drama. The harder Charlie tries to justify Emma’s past, the more his underlying feelings start to eat at him, causing friction not just between him and Emma, but in other parts of his life, as well.

    Strangely, especially for a character played by Zendaya, Emma recedes more than expected. Her explanations for her previous actions are timid at best, and she mostly seems to be waiting for Charlie to forgive her instead of questioning why she needs forgiveness. Borgli favors the male side of the equation, and in so doing he doesn’t dig as deep into the root of the issue as he could have.

    Still, the downward spiral at the center of the story has a propulsive nature to it, and each successive step proves to be both hard to watch and impossible to turn away from. It also helps that Borgli manages the tone well, keeping interactions between characters relatively light so that the film doesn’t turn into one like Marriage Story.

    Pattinson, who gets to use his own British accent for once, put on an interesting performance that is much better than his last two roles in Mickey 17 and Die My Love. He has good chemistry with Zendaya, who manages to shine despite being laden with a role that doesn’t play entirely to her strengths. Haim and Athie do good work in small roles, while Hailey Grace and Hannah Gross make an impact in brief appearances.

    The situation in which Emma and Charlie find themselves in The Drama is not one to be wished on anyone, but it’s presented well by Borgli, keeping tensions high for the bulk of the film. Despite the two main characters not given completely equal footing, the story finds a way to get to a satisfactory ending.

    ---

    The Drama opens in theaters on April 3.

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