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Ariel Wascom

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Aug 4, 2024, 1:46:03 PM8/4/24
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Closepremiered at the Cannes Film Festival[5] on 26 May 2022 to critical acclaim and won the Grand Prix; specialized critics praised the performances. The film is a co-production between Belgium, France and the Netherlands. It was released by Diaphana Distribution in France on 1 November 2022 and by Lumire in Benelux on 2 November. On 24 January 2023, the film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film at the 95th Academy Awards.[6] It also won the Andr Cavens Award for Best Film by the Belgian Film Critics Association.[7] At the 12th Magritte Awards, Close received ten nominations, including Best Screenplay for Dhont, becoming the most nominated film of the ceremony and ultimately winning seven awards.[8]

In rural Belgium, two 13-year-old boys, Lo and Rmi, are best friends who exhibit a deeply intimate affection for one another. They have a habit of sleeping in the same bed in Rmi's bedroom. Rmi's parents, Sophie and Peter, accept this without judgment and love Lo like a second child. Lo's family helps run agricultural work at a flower farm, where he and Rmi like to play together.


At school, a trio of female classmates openly ask if the two are a couple. Lo vehemently denies it, while Rmi does not comment. Lo becomes uneasy with this external perception, exacerbated by homophobic slurs directed towards him by other boys. Fearing being ostracized, he begins new friendships and takes up ice hockey, from which he deliberately excludes Rmi. One night, while sleeping over at Rmi's, Lo decides to sleep on a separate mattress. Upon waking up, he finds Rmi sleeping on the same mattress as him. Lo turns aggressive, leaving Rmi hurt and confused. Lo becomes progressively distant from Rmi, despite Rmi's attempts at interaction. He stops sleeping over, starts riding his bicycle with students other than Rmi, continues participating in ice hockey, and spends more time working with his family at the farm. Rmi finally confronts him, to which he acts defensively. Distraught and angry, Rmi attacks Lo and the two fight.


One day, after a school trip from which Rmi is absent, the class is informed that Rmi has killed himself, which Lo believes his withdrawal caused. However, he closes off his emotions from everyone else, unable to talk to anyone about it during the class therapy sessions offered by the school. The fact that his classmates describe Rmi in obituaries as a happy and friendly boy triggers a defiant opposition in Lo. Lo unsuccessfully tries to suppress his inner pain and cover it up by resuming ice hockey and gardening work with his family. Although none of his new friendships comes close to the deep connection he had with Rmi, Lo is able to confide in his older brother Charlie for comfort.


Following Rmi's funeral, Lo knows he has to talk to Sophie, wanting to maintain his connection with her, but is anxious to confess. When Sophie and Peter have dinner with Lo's family, Peter breaks down when Charlie describes his future plans, as Sophie and Peter mourn the loss of Rmi's future. When summer vacation begins, Lo visits Sophie at her workplace without warning. As she drives him home, he finally confesses to her that he believes Rmi's suicide is his fault for pushing him away. After an initial moment of tension, she tenderly hugs and comforts him as they cry together. Sometime later, she and Peter have moved away, leaving the house empty. Lo walks across the field which he and Rmi used to run through, remembering their connection and allowing himself to finally grieve for Rmi.


"When I read these testimonies of these 150 boys that aren't necessarily queer, I realized that making it only about a queer experience would limit it to that. [...] While it is not only about a queer experience, it's about the young male experience, because young men are not given that space to express themselves in that way. It gives you a place as an audience to interpret that experience as you want. But it's not about their sexuality, it's about how their intimacy and their sensuality are looked upon and how we are conditioned to look at it. How we want to compartmentalize everyone into boxes and labels and how we want to put a stamp on that love, and not let that love just exist in its true free form."


On 19 December 2018, it was announced that Lukas Dhont was developing a follow-up feature film to his 2018 Cannes Film Festival award-winning directorial debut Girl. Co-writer Angelo Tijssens and producer Dirk Impens were attached to re-team with Dhont for the then-untitled film, with Dhont stating that "It's going to be different but also in the style of Girl", and that "At the centre of it is a queer character."[10] In writing the film, Dhont was inspired by psychologist Niobe Way's book, Deep Secrets: Boys' Friendships and the Crisis of Connection, which documents her study of intimacy among teenage boys.[9] Dhont named the film after a "close friendship," a recurring term in the book.[11]


Principal photography began on 9 July 2021. Alongside the start of production, it was also announced that milie Dequenne and La Drucker were cast in main roles. Speaking about the film, Dhont said: "Three years after the overwhelming trip of Girl, it's incredibly good to be back on the set, with this hugely talented cast and crew, especially as this story is close to my heart."[16]


Close had its world premiere in competition for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival on 26 May 2022,[17] where it earned a 10-minute standing ovation[18][19] and was later awarded the Grand Prix.[20] It also played in the Official Competition at the 69th Sydney Film Festival, where it won the Sydney Film Prize.[21]


The film was released by Diaphana Distribution in France on 1 November 2022 and by Lumire in Benelux on 2 November. It was released by A24 in the United States on 27 January 2023, following a limited one-week theatrical run in New York City and Los Angeles on 2 December 2022.[22][23]


On the review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, Close holds an approval rating of 91% based on 151 reviews from critics, with an average rating of 8.4/10. The website's consensus reads, "So moving for a majority of its runtime that not even a manipulative ending can ruin the experience, Close is a tender and powerfully acted look at childhood innocence lost."[25] On Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, the film holds a score of 81 out of 100 based on 34 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[26] The film impressed critics for Dhont's script and direction, whose cinematic technique, as well as narrative structure, was praised for its ability to deal with the theme of adolescence and coming out.[27][28] Critics also praised the performances of the actors in the cast.[29]


The critic Peter Bradshaw, reviewing the film for The Guardian, gave it a score of 4/5, writing that the story told is "disturbing" in that however "wised-up teenagers probably are now about the language of relationships and LGBT issues; [...] the end of a friendship is devastating." He also finds in the relationship of the two protagonists the ability to be "outraged at what amounts to a disloyal capitulation to homophobia" since "none of the adult life experience to explain it away" exists. The journalist is also pleasantly impressed with the acting, calling De Waele and Dambrine "excellent" and Dequenne and Drucker "valuable appearances."[30]


Leslie Felperin of The Hollywood Reporter calls the film a "heart-crushing but emotionally rich story" "about suicide and guilt" in which "Dhont and his team know just how to turn up the emotional dials with stunning magic-hour lensing", finding, however, that the narrative is "just on the brink of overkill" on the externalization of feelings, although the director "keeps the brakes on just enough" to appease them.[31] Robbie Collin, reviewing the film for The Daily Telegraph, gives it a score of 5/5, denoting the director's work as "flawless" as the scenes "are handled with a sure but feather-light touch", concluding that "Close is a great film about friendship, but perhaps an even greater one about being alone."[32]


For the Italian press, Roberto Nepoti of la Repubblica divides the film's narrative into two moments, the first related to childhood in an "idyllic" atmosphere, while the second, related to adolescence, "veers to the dramatic by showing the evolution" of the protagonists, in which he denotes "the delicacy in dealing with the sensitive subject of sexuality when it is still immature and undefined." The journalist appreciates the "well-mastered" screenplay, appreciating the director's ability to do "symbolic work on the colors" surrounding the characters, although in the second half of the film Dhont "allows himself to be possessed by the temptation of the pathetic by overly soliciting the viewer's emotion."[33]


In a poll by IndieWire of 75 critics at Cannes, Close was named the best film of the festival.[34] Dhont shared the Grand Prix with Claire Denis' Stars at Noon.[20] The film also won the Sydney Film Prize in June 2022 at the 69th Sydney Film Festival,[35] with jury president David Wenham deeming the film "a standout" and calling it "a mature film about innocence" that "displayed a mastery of restraint, subtle handling of story, astute observations and delicate attention to finer details."[36]


On 16 September 2022, the film was announced as Belgium's submission for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film at the 95th Academy Awards,[37] and made the December shortlist,[38] before being nominated for the Academy Award on 24 January 2023.[6]


The close() function shall deallocate the file descriptor indicated by fildes. To deallocate means to make thefile descriptor available for return by subsequent calls to open() or other functionsthat allocate file descriptors. All outstanding record locks owned by the process on the file associated with the file descriptorshall be removed (that is, unlocked).

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