It's almost impossible to watch Guadagnino's new HBO miniseries We Are Who We Are and not immediately think of Call Me By Your Name. That film's queer coming-of-age story was entirely removed from the present day and time, yet tethered emotionally, sonically, and circumstantially to the present moment. Of course, the one that did, 2017's Oscar-nominated Call Me By Your Name, did it so perfectly that it now feels like this is Guadagnino's wheelhouse. There's a dreamy quality to everything director Luca Guadagnino has made a lush, indulgent, singular space that creates a perfect setting for coming-of-age stories, even if the majority of his films ( I Am Love, A Bigger Splash, Suspiria) haven't really addressed that topic.
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