i needed to do this-- .·´¯`(>▂<)´¯`·.
seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands
seen from India
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Israel
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Israel

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Israel

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Japan
seen from Australia
seen from Kazakhstan

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from China
i needed to do this-- .·´¯`(>▂<)´¯`·.
👔🏆┊some of my favorite timothée red carpet outfits!
timmy knows what looks best on him. 😜
go follow @wildchalamet on instagram. 🦋
Para empezar a hablar sobre coming of age movies, elegí Call me by your name (2017). Dirigida por Luca Guadagnino.
¿qué puedo decir que no sepamos de esta peli?
Sentí que es un film que contaba más con los planos que la historia en sí. Va empezando con planos más abiertos, generales o enteros, y a medida que avanza la narración estos empiezan a cerrarse y adentrarnos en él, en Elio, al final lo veremos en esos primeros planos, y podremos ver desde el más profundo sentimiento y mínima textura en sus expresiones.
El soundtrack me volvió loca desde la primera vez que la vi hasta el día de hoy, acompaña perfecto a aquella Italia y a la historia de amor (y desamor) entre Elio y Oliver.
La paleta de colores te hace perder y volver a encontrarte en esos planos narrativos tan ricos.
Timothee definitivamente es mi actor contemporáneo preferido, y espero con ansias su participación en más películas, porque en las que lo vi me tocó el cora.
Sin explayarme más, si tienen ganas de empatizar con un personaje y quererlo sin dudas esta es la peli porque estoy segura que muchos se sentirán identificados con esta construcción dramática, desde la desilucion, hasta lo más interno de uno.
this movie would never get old
One summer, nine years after his last letter, I received a phone call in the States from my parents. “You’ll never guess who is staying with us for two days. In your old bedroom. And standing right in front of me now.” I had already guessed, of course, but pretended I couldn’t. “The fact that you refuse to say you’ve already guessed says a great deal,” my father said with a snicker before saying goodbye. There was a tussle between my parents over who was to hand their phone over. Finally his voice came through. “Elio,” he said. I could hear my parents and the voices of children in the background. No one could say my name that way. “Elio,” I repeated, to say it was I speaking but also to spark our old game and show I’d forgotten nothing. “It’s Oliver,” he said. He had forgotten.
-Andrè Aciman, Call me by your name.