

I went into it completely blind, and throughout watching, I felt so many different emotions. I had never heard of it before and didn’t know anything about it in advance. Something that alters their lives forever.Ĭall Me By Your Name was a film that surprised me as a viewer. What begins as a friendship slowly dissolves over the course of the summer into something that neither of them expected. Perlman’s annual summer intern tasked with helping him with his studies.įrom the instant Oliver arrives, they both begin to discover an attraction to each other, a desire to be with each other at all time. Oliver, played wonderfully by Armie Hammer, is a 24 year old American Scholar working on his Doctorate, arrives as Mr. Perlman, played by Michael Stuhlbarg is a Professor, specialising in Greece-Roman culture, and also has an especially close relationship with Elio. He lives in his families’ 17th Century villa, where he spends most of his time transcribing and playing classical music, reading and somewhat flirting with a girl named Marzia, played by Esther Garrel, whilst the audience begins to watch a relationship blossom between them. The story revolves around 17 year old Italian-American, Elio Perlman, played magnificently by Timothée Chalamet. "December is likely to see our typical summer weather systems pushed further south than normal, meaning more humid air coming off the Tasman Sea, and into NSW and eastern Victoria." The BOM's summer outlook comes amid heavy rainfall and widespread flooding in eastern parts of country, which has also been attributed to La Nina.Call Me By Your Name, the winner of Best Adapted Screenplay at the 90th Academy Awards (2017), a film that tugs the heart strings with its effective use of storytelling and compassion.īased on the acclaimed novel by André Aciman, Luca Guadagnino and James Ivory tell a sensual tale of first love through beautifully shot scenes set within the summer of 1983 in Northern Italy. He said the La Nina could lead to unseasonably high rainfall in the normally winter-dominant rainfall areas of the south. "While this event is approaching its end, warmer waters to the north-west of Australia may persist, and continue to increase the chance of rainfall," Dr Watkins said. "Over winter and spring we saw a negative Indian Ocean Dipole, a pattern of ocean temperature patterns in the oceans to our west that was favourable to rainfall over Australia, and a dominant influence on our climate," he said.
SUMMER IN THE COUNTRY MOVIE DRIVERS
Other climate drivers have also played a role in the BOM outlook. READ MORE: He said this pattern is likely to continue through until at least the end of January. La Nina describes a pattern of ocean temperatures that sees warmer waters in the western Pacific, which in turn drives increased atmospheric moisture and rainfall, including heavy rainfall, over Australia," Dr Watkins said.
SUMMER IN THE COUNTRY MOVIE DRIVER
"The big driver looking at the months ahead is La Nina, which is now established in the Pacific Ocean for the second year in a row.

Dr Watkins said La Nina was just one of several climate drivers likely to create continuing wet conditions for parts of eastern Australia this summer. Further to the west, where the influence of the La Nina are not so pronounced, there are no strong swings to either wetter or drier conditions in South Australia, while parts of Western Australia are likely to see average to slightly above average rainfall. The BOM has also warned of the increased likelihood of damaging tropical cyclones, heavy rainfall and widespread flooding. "Summer is likely to see above average rainfall across eastern Australia, warmer than average days and nights across most of the country, high stream flows at most locations with an increased risk of widespread flooding and grassfire risk is raised in areas of NSW and WA," Dr Watkins said. The Bureau's Head of Operational Climate Services, Dr Andrew Watkins, presented the outlook on Thursday after a La Nina weather pattern was declared earlier this week. Eastern Australia has been marked for a "wetter than average summer" in the Bureau of Meteorology's latest Summer Climate and Water Outlook for 2021 to 2022.
