![]() ![]() With a well-rounded cast that includes Chloë Sevigny, Kid Cudi, and a whole bunch of newcomers, as well as a score by Dev Hynes (the “R&B miracle worker” known as Blood Orange), the series is one of several buzzy projects up Guadagnino’s sleeve. ![]() But in typical Guadagnino fashion, the drama is driven more by emotional warfare than the literal kind through the eyes of Fraser and Caitlin (played by Jack Dylan Grazer and Jordan Kristine Seamón), a pair of curious American teens, we watch the tangled knot of adolescence unfold in real time, the growing pains at once devastating and intoxicating. With We Are Who We Are, his new series for HBO, we find the director back in his native Italy, this time at a U.S. It’s this mark-of sex via symbolism, of the sheer eroticism of daily life-that has made Guadagnino the go-to filmmaker for quiet tales of self-discovery. Throughout the film, eggs ooze, gazes linger, and tensions bubble against the backdrop of Crema’s twisting alleys and towering duomos. ![]() Anyone who watched Timothée Chalamet finger a blonde-haired peach, bathed in Italian light as its juices squeezed and spilled onto his chest in Luca Guadagnino’s Call Me By Your Name, knows instinctively that the director is a sensualist. ![]()
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