I watched Close last week and loved the movie. The two amateurs playing the boys were magnificent. How the director got them to appear so amazingly natural was superb. I think Eden Dambrine as Leo, the boy with the fair hair, performs that role better than Timothee Chalamet had played his role in Call Me By Your Name. Why he failed to win an Oscar nomination as Best Actor beats me.
Three shots more or less just with Leo's face and his large eyes made one realise exactly what he was thinking. When his friend Remi is performing his oboe with the ensemble those eyes showed how much he loved his friend. On the bus coming back from the school trip and his mother tells him that Remi is no longer with us, that look of sharp disbelief tells us he knows what has happened. And then then scene at the very end. Whereas at the start we had seen Leo and Remi running and laughing through fields of flowers, a year later we see Leo in the same fields but he stops and turns around. He has started to mature in the intervening year but those eyes tell us he still misses Remi.
Pre-pubesent male friendships is an unusual subject for a movie. At the Cannes Film Festival, after the ten-minute standing ovation from the audience, the director takes a microphone and explains why he made it. It is a very short moving speech. You can see it in this longer vdo. Start at 10:00 minutes in. It lasts only 1 minute 26 seconds.