‘We Are Who We Are’ Review: HBO Finale Turns a Hollywood Ending into a Subversive Triumph
Luca Guadagnino’s “Right Here, Right Now VII — And Last” builds to a touching close that both indulges and defies expectations.
Luca Guadagnino’s “Right Here, Right Now VII — And Last” builds to a touching close that both indulges and defies expectations.
The creator behind HBO’s teen identity drama — set during the 2016 election — has already written a bible for Season 2, but he’s got a full slate to finish first.
The 17-year-old actress makes her screen debut in Luca Guadagnino’s saga as a teenager questioning her identity, and the world around her.
It’s the blink-and-you’ll-miss-it “Call Me by Your Name” reunion fans were not expecting.
Beautifully shot, paced, and performed, the writer-director’s meticulous, character-driven storytelling meshes perfectly with his prolonged new medium.
The director’s first television series might look like a riff on “Call Me by Your Name,” but the filmmaker promises it’s a very different project.
The Italian filmmaker seems to be channeling serious “Call Me By Your Name” vibes in his first television project.
Guadagnino makes his first foray into episodic television with “We Are Who We Are,” a coming-of-age series hitting HBO in September.
Jack Dylan Grazer and Jordan Kristine Seamón lead the eight-episode series.
Guadagnino is keeping busy while in lockdown as he finishes work on three upcoming projects.
The “Call Me By Your Name” director is expected to direct at least a pair of episodes for the series, which films this summer.