VENICE, Italy — Venice Film Festival regular Luca Guadagnino was back on the Lido to debut his new Daniel Craig film ''Queer'' on Tuesday night.
A festival favorite, Guadagnino had to forgo a splashy red carpet premiere for the sexy tennis drama ''Challengers'' last year, when the studio delayed its release amid the actors strike. But the filmmaker is returning with another highly anticipated project, adapting a William S. Burroughs novel about an American expat in Mexico City in 1950 who develops an obsession with a young, male student.
Guadagnino, 53, first read the book when he was 17 and it made a profound impact on him. He didn't know who Burroughs was, or his significance in his time, but he fell into its world at the same time he was dreaming of building worlds of his own in movies.
''It really transformed me and changed me forever,'' Guadagnino said. ''Because I want to be loyal to that young boy, I want to bring this to the screen.''
A longtime fan of Craig, an actor who he said is unafraid to be fragile on screen, Guadagnino also said he never thought he'd be able to get him in a movie. But Craig's ''yes'' came immediately.
''If I wasn't in this movie, I would want to be in it,'' Craig said. ''These are the kinds of film I want to see, I want to make, I want to be out there…they're challenging but they're incredibly accessible.''
A few hours before the premiere, Craig spoke to The Associated Press about the role, which included nudity and sex scenes. His character, William Lee, spends his days drinking tequila in sweaty bars and his nights pursuing men, or doing heroin alone. It's a raw and exposing performance, but Craig trusted his director's vision.
''I think if it was wrong, (Luca would) say something, but if it was right, he'd just say, you know, move on. Let's do it. Let's go. We have it,'' Craig said. ''Which can be a little disconcerting, but I think after a while you just go, ‘I'm in his hands.'''