There are many respite clips in the film, and life exhausts all respite. Even in the midst of despair and fear, we cannot stop fighting and chasing hope. When everyone lay on the street, a great sadness hit me, helpless and tragic. I'm amazed that Sean is aggressive and active in parliament and at events, but he is always funny, gentle, affectionate and respectful towards his partner. Crazy in sobriety. They are a group of impulsive and agitated protesters, as well as strong rational critics. I really like the slogan, "Ignorance is our worst enemy, knowledge is our weapon". In the early 1990s, AIDS swept the world, and everyone's understanding of it was very weak and partial. Many people were accidentally infected at a young age, underestimating the harm and overestimating the emotion at that time. In France, where drug use is legalized, and France where love is free, it has not been paid attention to and infected. What is wrong is not having awareness of prevention, what is wrong is not understanding, what is wrong is misunderstanding. Many of the reforms are radical. For them who clearly understand that they are going to die, if they do the right thing in the wrong way, of course they will still be effective.
Every time I watch a French movie, I deeply admire their revolutionary awareness and resistance, and never give up. So frank and straightforward, they are afraid of the virus itself, but they never think that homosexuality is wrong and sex is wrong. When talking about the cause of the illness, he didn't complain about the person who caused him to be infected, but took responsibility for his rashness. Sean said, "Both sides are at fault, and one person is half responsible." I am shocked by this kind of uprightness.
This kind of humanistic charm with ideas and responsibility convinced me. Sean's green eyes were too unyielding, soft and sad. Death is so bleak, is there still that blood-colored river flowing in the dream?
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