Call Me by Your Name

2017 "Is it better to speak or die?"
7.8| 2h12m| R| en| More Info
Released: 24 November 2017 Released
Producted By: La Cinéfacture
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: http://sonyclassics.com/callmebyyourname/
Info

In 1980s Italy, a relationship begins between seventeen-year-old teenage Elio and the older adult man hired as his father's research assistant.

Genre

Drama, Romance

Watch Online

Call Me by Your Name (2017) is now streaming with subscription on HULU

Director

Luca Guadagnino

Production Companies

La Cinéfacture

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.
Watch Now
Call Me by Your Name Videos and Images
View All
  • Top Credited Cast
  • |
  • Crew

Call Me by Your Name Audience Reviews

More Review
GamerTab That was an excellent one.
Mjeteconer Just perfect...
Breakinger A Brilliant Conflict
Rexanne It’s sentimental, ridiculously long and only occasionally funny
amylouise-57317 This film is just a beautiful love story which will leave anyone watching it feeling satisfied and definitely emotional. While the storyline itself if amaizng the acting is just something else! The chemistry they both have onscreen is something many films do not have! Would recommend anyone to watch this film, it makes you think and plays at your heartstrings.
gwsecrets This movie will be loved by gay men and fans of patriarchal intellectualism, the lead character is arrogant, narcissistic and shallow to the core, as indeed are many of the other male characters, the love of the male seems to be the main thrust of the film, while female characters are dismissed generally as pathetic male worshipping puppies, in one scene the men are talking about the opportunity for Timothee Chalamets character to have sex with a your female, and of course he could have her whenever he wanted, though when an enquiry from the mother about the discussion she overhears but who is not present at the table but engaged in gardening, and not involved in the conversation, she is summarily dismissed by the male party when they change the subject, as if a mother in such a free spirited community would be somehow be shocked by the thought of her son engaging in a sexual relationship, as a man I found this whole scene quite demeaning to women, as was the general attitude to female roles in the movie, without one single strong female character throughout. I found the whole film shallow and its presentation of male intellectualism and demigod worshipping by even shallower female characters unbelievably sexist and demeaning, I'm amazed that this is presented as a love story, the lead character, rather than a bohemian, intellectual, romantic, is just a self absorbed, narcissistic waster in love with his own self importance, there's nothing to love about him at all. I cannot find anything to recommend this completely wasted opportunity. its shallow and sexist and, like its lead character, in love with its own self importance, with a subliminal message to women that you are only there to worship the men and do the chores, woeful.
michel-shook This by far is one of the best movies I have ever seen. Although I wish the ending would have been happier, it goes based off the premise of the book so therefore it is a ending that fits. I have watched this movie on more than one occasion and it just gets better each time. If you haven't seen this, you need to!
b-ere-94 Call Me By Your Name made me fell in love. With the characters, with the environment, the surroundings, with that wonderful carefree summer-feeling and with Italy. All I wanted to do after watching the film was to book the first best airplane to a small beautiful Italian village and spend my time there exploring the breathtaking nature by foot (or bike) and eat delicious food. For a film to have such power and to truly convey these feelings through the big screen to its viewers is remarkable. Call Me By Your Name is a lot of things and, maybe above all, it's real. It all just feels almost hauntingly real and what I as a viewer witness truly felt like everyday reality in this little village in northern Italy. Gudagnino has created a filmic world where reading books, cooling down from the heath by swimming in lakes and just simply existing without any obligations or huge plans is enough. Everything feels so wonderfully carefree. During one scene in the film, Oliver asks Elio what he's doing the whole summer and Elio's answer ("waiting for the summer to end") is so simple but it says so much about both him and several other young adults like him. Even though it can be argued that Call Me By Your Name is a huge film about certain big moments, Gudagnino also wonderfully emphasizes even the smallest details such as Oliver cracking an egg at the breakfast table way too hard. As the minutes fly by, it's impossible (at least for me personally) to not fall for these characters and their surroundings.[...]I watched Call Me By Your Name in the beginning of January, and directly after the end credits finished I felt with complete certainty that I wouldn't see anything better all year. It's both a strange and wonderful feeling to have, and there's no denying it either. It's just a fact and it's better to accept it. The biggest villain in the film is the tragedy of love, but it's worth noting that it's not all doom and gloom. There's an underlying message of having the courage to actually feel things - both the good and all of the bad. This is probably the most evident in that perfect monologue towards the end delivered by Elio's father Mr. Perlman (a fantastic Stuhlbarg). It's nothing less of a masterpiece on its own and I just remember sitting in the cinema staring at the big screen with a huge lump in my throat, tears filling my eyes and goosebumps all over my body. That monologue was like the cherry on top of an already perfect ice-cream sundae.