sovay: (Viktor & Mordecai)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2018-03-18 02:33 am

Like Hephaistion who died Alexander's lover

I seem to have celebrated Saint Patrick's Day with Haitian food and Italian film. Works for me.

([personal profile] rushthatspeaks and I got takeout from Pikliz—fried goat with plantains and their levitatingly spicy jerk chicken—and caught the late show of James Ivory and Luca Guadagnino's Call Me by Your Name (2017) at the Somerville. I am making a note to write about this film, because I just really liked it: it's queer, it's Jewish, it has just the right amount of classical allusions, a simultaneously precise and dreamy sense of place and time and the same attention to the details of a loving and supportive family and an awkward and exhilarating summer of first love, avoiding clichés except for the ones that got that way from being true. I am fascinated by the differences between it and Maurice (1987), the generational shifts in queer film in Ivory's own lifetime and career. I think I owe other movies first.)
asakiyume: (bluebird)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2018-03-18 11:58 am (UTC)(link)
I'm glad it's good! It's the type of film you want very much to be good. It's wandering in treacherous territory, not so much as a queer romance but because of involving an age and experience difference and being set abroad and all that: I'm glad it avoids clichés. I was in a bookstore where someone was buying the book; the clerk said the book was even better. Her words: "it has even more layers."

"Levitatingly" is definitely the sort of approbation I look for when someone's describing spicy food. Sounds delicious.
asakiyume: (miroku)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2018-03-19 12:49 pm (UTC)(link)
I wasn't worried for myself! Or for anyone, really--I was just aware that when you tell a story with those elements, problems can come up, and I'm glad to hear that in this case, they don't.