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Sophia 2022-04-20 09:02:21
let's move
That night, the terminally ill Sean murmured in a dream, and he saw the blood-red Seine. That was his anger and the cry of all the forgotten AIDS people! As a film that speaks for a few people, 120 BPM records the efforts of ACT-UP, a civil organization, to prevent AIDS in very real camera...
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Daphnee 2022-03-22 09:02:42
"One Hundred and Twenty BPM" Existence is the original sin, how much hysteria does it not count as silence?
The whole film is 135 minutes long, with several express hints of "silence = death", which reminds me of Eason Chan's "exaggeration": Do you think I'm exaggerated just because I'm afraid of getting attention for words like wood and stone? Actually, I'm afraid of being forgotten. Let's zoom in and...
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Darian 2022-03-16 09:01:07
Some of the transitions are really fancy and ingenious, which makes people applaud! I kissed Nathan when I was called a fag by a high school girl, and I kissed him so happy and proudly
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Geo 2022-03-28 09:01:11
4 out of 4: It's been a long time since I've seen such a passionate movie - this rare passion not only from the protest movement, but also from sex, love and life. And when everyone thinks a movie about illness is unquestionably heavy, they're all wrong - it's a movie about brave people who are bound to come, and it doesn't point to heavy because every moment of it is accumulation and release. I don't think the shift towards personal emotional characterization in the second half is a drag on the whole, not only because the lack of personal content only makes it a documentary with limited ambitions, but also because until the day when the battle is completely won , Sean's tragedy is also the tragedy of many Act Up members. He is no longer him we see, we see everyone through him. I was confused as to why the four dance scenes must be added ritually, except for the point, maybe as some people say, they are superfluous, or maybe they are just expressing a very simple thing: the next battle The joy of being alive before coming.