Luca Guadagnino’s Queer Is ‘About Lust, Desire, And Carnal Emotions’, Says Daniel Craig

HomeNews

Luca Guadagnino’s Queer Is ‘About Lust, Desire, And Carnal Emotions’, Says Daniel Craig

Few filmmakers working today make movies as sensual — or as sensuous — as Luca Guadagnino. From the sun-ripened romance of Call Me By Your Name, to

James Carville Isn’t Thrilled About Being Right: “I’ve Become the Guy I Used to Hate”
Election 2024: Donald Trump Wins Wisconsin To Officially Clinch Win Over Kamala Harris
Art History Doc ‘The World According to Allee Willis’ Official Trailer

Few filmmakers working today make movies as sensual — or as sensuous — as Luca Guadagnino. From the sun-ripened romance of Call Me By Your Name, to the cannibal carnalism of Bones And All and the mouth-watering ménage à trois at the centre of this year’s Challengers, the Italian auteur has been making movies sexy again since long before sex (or a lack thereof) in cinema became a daily discourse driver. And his latest, a long-gestating adaptation of William S. Burroughs’ semi-autobiographical book Queer — in which Daniel Craig plays a lustful American ex-pat who falls head-over-heels for a newborn buck (Drew Starkey) in mid-century Mexico City — could well be his most smouldering work to date.

For Daniel Craig, whose path first crossed with Guadagnino’s some 20 years ago, just before a little franchise called James Bond catapulted him into the global spotlight, an opportunity to work with the Suspiria filmmaker at long last — especially on a project as emotionally evocative as Queer — wasn’t to be missed.  “It’s a love story,” Craig says of the movie, talking to Empire for our world-exclusive Andor Season 2 issue. “It’s about lust and desire, all of these carnal emotions, that are universal to everyone. I thought, ‘I could make something of this.’”

Central to that lust and desire is the connection Craig’s character, William Lee, forms with the inscrutable object of his obsession, Eugene Allerton (Starkey). It’s a bond — both physical and spiritual — that you may be surprised to learn Craig and Starkey nurtured through, of all things, the medium of dance. No, really. “Neither Drew nor I are dancers,” laughs Craig. “But by having that as a starting point, during rehearsal, rolling around with somebody, that’s where it all starts. I hope viewers are watching these two and recognising there’s something there.” Spycraft, sleuthing, throwing shapes… is there anything Daniel Craig can’t do?

Read our full feature on Luca Guadagnino’s Queer — speaking to Guadagnino as well as stars Daniel Craig and Drew Starkey — in Empire’s Ultimate 2025 Preview, on sale Thursday 21 November. Pre-order a copy online here. Queer arrives in UK and Irish cinemas on 13 December.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 0
DISQUS: