Queer Asks You to Believe Daniel Craig Can’t Get Laid
Based on William S. Burroughs’s cult novel, Luca Guadagnino’s Queer finds an American expat looking for love among the men of 1950s Mexico. But a story about thwarted desires runs into problems when you cast a Hollywood hunk like Daniel Craig.

Daniel Craig and Drew Starkey star in Queer. (A24)
The films of Luca Guadagnino tend to be so rapturously received, critical opinion will soon reach the reverent heights of Guadagnino’s own self-assessment.
In interviews, the director tends to adopt the tone of an aristocratic genius stooping to discuss his artistry with some stupid peasant. When one hapless interlocutor asks a perfectly reasonable question about why there are several Nirvana songs in Guadagnino’s new film, Queer, which is based on the 1985 book by William S. Burroughs and set in 1950s Mexico, the director responds with the grandiosity of a Sicilian duke:
I personally have been cultivating my knowledge of Burroughs and passion for him and my attraction for his imagery forever — since I was 16 — which made me meet, in the process, Nirvana. I engraved in my consciousness and unconsciousness a lot of elements that are directly or indirectly related with one another about these two great artists. So when it came to this movie, it was more instinctual, the process of having those choices, more than rational. But the unconscious never lies. These crossover references that you’re directing us towards, they’re very accurate. They’re accurate because the intuition behind it has been nurtured by a deep studying of the texts.