-By David Noh
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No less than a truly epic account of the war against AIDS waged by
a small band of New York activists which eventually burgeoned into
the ground-shifting force that was ACT UP, Charles France’s superb,
powerful debut documentary will stand the test of time as the
definitive account of an era that was both horrifying and
inspiring.
Addressing the history of the disease and the devastating toll it
initially took in the gay community, the frustrating apathy of
government and medical authorities, which could easily be deemed
homophobic, and the heroically unstinting efforts of committed
activists to combat these challenges, France skillfully weaves and
maintains control of the myriad, disparate threads of this dark
tapestry in a way that can only be described as masterly. Anything
but a dry or depressing account of those plague years, which have
sadly receded into memory by a later, feckless generation,
How
to Survive a Plague has the dramatic excitement of a superior
movie thriller, with the added plus that, ever informed by a
probing intelligence and clear-sightedness, here are true heroes
and villains (two Presidents, Jesse Helms, Pat Buchanan, et. al)
battling it out in an actual life-and-death struggle.
Among the heroes must be counted Peter Staley and Bob Rafsky. The
former was a Wall Street trader, himself infected with HIV, who was
an early member of ACT UP and became one of its most profound
spokespeople, fighting for increased medical research and
delivering a stirring address at the 1990 International AIDS
Conference in San Francisco. Rafsky was the guy who really brought
AIDS into the political arena when he heckled Bill Clinton during
his 1992 campaign. France includes footage of all these seminal
moments, as well as a blistering eulogy delivered by Rafsky at the
funeral of a friend, whose death he lays at the feet of the first
President Bush.
France skillfully delineates the necessary scientific aspects of
his tale in dealing with the disease, here even making cellular
biology understandable to the layman, and yet he never loses sight
of the human factor, although quite wonderfully eschewing any
sentiment. What is really moving is how many of those pioneering
activists, like Staley, remain alive and vital today, even as
others, like Rafsky, have sadly gone.
France blessedly does not try to paint these activists and ACT UP
in saintly hues and we are witness to the often volcanic infighting
that went on between differing factions, all of which makes the
eventual, undeniable triumph of their efforts for increased
research and access to necessary drugs all the more hard-won and
precious. Those efforts, of course, included infamous
demonstrations like the ones at St. Patrick’s Cathedral, the New
York Stock Exchange and, most exhilaratingly, the FDA, and one can
only hope that those Occupy protesters, wherever they may be, will
avail themselves of this film and the brilliantly effective,
anarchic techniques revealed in it.
Film Review: How to Survive a Plague
This amazingly well-done, admirably dry-eyed documentary about a true human victory over what was once a universal death sentence might well be the year’s finest.
Sept 21, 2012
-By David Noh
No less than a truly epic account of the war against AIDS waged by a small band of New York activists which eventually burgeoned into the ground-shifting force that was ACT UP, Charles France’s superb, powerful debut documentary will stand the test of time as the definitive account of an era that was both horrifying and inspiring.
Addressing the history of the disease and the devastating toll it initially took in the gay community, the frustrating apathy of government and medical authorities, which could easily be deemed homophobic, and the heroically unstinting efforts of committed activists to combat these challenges, France skillfully weaves and maintains control of the myriad, disparate threads of this dark tapestry in a way that can only be described as masterly. Anything but a dry or depressing account of those plague years, which have sadly receded into memory by a later, feckless generation,
How to Survive a Plague has the dramatic excitement of a superior movie thriller, with the added plus that, ever informed by a probing intelligence and clear-sightedness, here are true heroes and villains (two Presidents, Jesse Helms, Pat Buchanan, et. al) battling it out in an actual life-and-death struggle.
Among the heroes must be counted Peter Staley and Bob Rafsky. The former was a Wall Street trader, himself infected with HIV, who was an early member of ACT UP and became one of its most profound spokespeople, fighting for increased medical research and delivering a stirring address at the 1990 International AIDS Conference in San Francisco. Rafsky was the guy who really brought AIDS into the political arena when he heckled Bill Clinton during his 1992 campaign. France includes footage of all these seminal moments, as well as a blistering eulogy delivered by Rafsky at the funeral of a friend, whose death he lays at the feet of the first President Bush.
France skillfully delineates the necessary scientific aspects of his tale in dealing with the disease, here even making cellular biology understandable to the layman, and yet he never loses sight of the human factor, although quite wonderfully eschewing any sentiment. What is really moving is how many of those pioneering activists, like Staley, remain alive and vital today, even as others, like Rafsky, have sadly gone.
France blessedly does not try to paint these activists and ACT UP in saintly hues and we are witness to the often volcanic infighting that went on between differing factions, all of which makes the eventual, undeniable triumph of their efforts for increased research and access to necessary drugs all the more hard-won and precious. Those efforts, of course, included infamous demonstrations like the ones at St. Patrick’s Cathedral, the New York Stock Exchange and, most exhilaratingly, the FDA, and one can only hope that those Occupy protesters, wherever they may be, will avail themselves of this film and the brilliantly effective, anarchic techniques revealed in it.