We all know someone like Sean

Rosemary 2022-04-21 09:03:08

The director's shooting is very delicate. After Sean and Nathan had sex for the first time, the alarm went off at two in the morning, and Sean took a pill from the drawer and took it. Later, I checked the information and learned that HIV carriers must take medicine on time and must be accurate to the minute, because the amount of medicine in the body cannot be too much or too little. As you can imagine, most of us know very little about AIDS.

16-year-old Sean was also infected for the first time with a math teacher because he did not understand AIDS. Instead of blaming the teacher, he said to Nathan, "When you pass AIDS to others, you should take absolute responsibility; and when you are infected, it is the same." Perhaps it was this experience that made him participate Act Up, an anti-AIDS organization.

Act Up members go to middle schools to promote AIDS, advise the principal to hand out condoms at the school, and a schoolgirl tells Sean she's not gay AIDS is far from her. Sean hugged Nathan next to him with a kiss. Forget Nathan, everyone who sees this scene will fall in love with Sean!

In Sean's eyes, Act Up chairman Thibaud is selfish and pushy. He always wanted to make big news, and he was thinking of shocking slogans, blood on the Seine, bloody cases... These actions could most detonate the media, looking for opportunities to speak in the public. In a debate, Sean objected to Act Up's over-focus on the smear case (a French hospital used to give HIV-infected blood to hemophiliacs) and rushing to jail because he didn't want Act Up to turn into a vengeance for AIDS patients. organization.

When Sean was terminally ill and was admitted to the hospital, Tebow came to see him. Sean said that his T4 index was rising. Tebow did not know that the new drug could only be used for people with a T4 index below 50, and was still comforting Sean. is getting better. The guy on the TV who is fighting for the AIDS patient for the camera probably doesn't know what he's doing.

Sean is very cool. He is not us, but he is very similar to the people around us. They are kind, passionate, optimistic, and have their own way of getting along with the world. I love this guy, but I'll probably never be him.

Finally, he danced in the parade so beautifully!

PRIDE!

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Extended Reading
  • 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.

  • Tamara 2022-03-25 09:01:19

    Reminiscent of Corral's "Night of the Beast", life is like all the dazzling lights, fireworks and landscapes. Gathering, marching and protesting again and again, passionate patients died, and they loved life more than ordinary people. Several scenes are awe-inspiring, and Almodovar's tears of grievance can be better understood. BTW, the speed of C2 is a bit overwhelming.