Aristóteles Y Dante Descubren Los Secretos - Del Universo Película Exclusive
The book is famous for the line: “Words were different when they lived inside of you.” The film’s greatest challenge is pulling those words out into the open air. If it succeeds, it will join the pantheon of Call Me By Your Name and Moonlight —not because it copies them, but because it offers a sunnier, Southwestern warmth that those films lacked. Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe is not just for teenagers. It is for the adult who remembers what it felt like to be 17, to be confused, and to find one person who made the silence bearable.
That question is the ignition key. Over one long, sweltering summer, the two boys navigate the violent borderlands of friendship, family trauma, and the terrifying realization that what they feel for each other might be deeper than friendship. What makes this film different from other LGBTQ+ teen dramas is its refusal to be defined by tragedy. Sáenz’s novel is not a story about coming out ; it is a story about coming home to yourself. The book is famous for the line: “Words
Keep an eye on the festival circuit (following its TIFF premiere) for wide release dates. Rating: Expect a heartfelt PG-13 for language and thematic elements. It is for the adult who remembers what
Bring a friend. Bring a blanket. And prepare to discover the secret: that loving someone is the easiest and hardest thing you will ever do. What makes this film different from other LGBTQ+
If you haven’t cried over this book yet, get your tissues ready. Here is everything you need to know about the film adaptation that promises to redefine the modern coming-of-age genre. The year is 1987. El Paso, Texas. Two Mexican-American teenage boys, polar opposites in every visible way, meet at a swimming pool.