Call Me By Your Name [extra Quality]
The Architecture of Desire: Confession, Gaze, and Queer Temporality in Call Me By Your Name
In the film, Guadagnino utilizes the lush, rural landscape of Crema to create a sense of timelessness. The sound of cicadas, the splashing of river water, the clinking of silverware during al fresco lunches, and the sticky sweetness of ripening apricots aren't just background details—they are the heartbeat of the story. This sensory immersion mirrors the internal world of 17-year-old Elio Perlman, whose burgeoning obsession with Oliver, his father’s doctoral guest, is felt through glances and silences rather than grand declarations. The Power of Vulnerability Call Me By Your Name
Guadagnino uses this environment to create a timeless, almost Edenic space—a world without judgment, where intellectual discourse (classical statues, piano transcriptions by Liszt and Bach) coexists with carnal pleasures (dancing, swimming, late-night reading). This is a place where a young man can fall in love with another man without the weight of societal homophobia crashing down. The only antagonist is the calendar. The Architecture of Desire: Confession, Gaze, and Queer
Conclusion
“We rip out so much of ourselves to be cured of things faster than we should that we go bankrupt by the age of thirty… How you live your life is your business. But remember, our hearts and our bodies are given to us only once.” The Power of Vulnerability Guadagnino uses this environment
