Call Me By Your Name Jun 2026
Set a table with:
The Beauty and Artistry of Call Me By Your Name | by Daniel Hassall Call Me By Your Name
Most romance films end with the couple getting together. Call Me By Your Name ends with the couple breaking apart, and it is the best part of the film. After Oliver leaves and calls to say he is getting married (a gut-punch delivered with devastating casualness), Elio does not scream or throw things. He sits by the fireplace. Set a table with: The Beauty and Artistry
Beyond the romance, Call Me By Your Name subtly explores themes of diaspora and identity. The Perlman family are Jewish, as is Oliver. The film uses their shared heritage as a quiet bridge between them. During a tense dinner conversation about the "prejudice hidden in silence," the film nods to the fact that while they can be gay in Italy, they exist within layers of historical trauma. He sits by the fireplace

