I watched this kind of movie again in the middle of the night, it was so depressing, and I was a little speechless at the end, but I think it is the AIDS organization, this group of patients is more three-dimensionally portrayed, not as touching the life force in other stories, etc. Complicated, that kind of sex, parades, madness, confrontation with the government, dancing madly for fun, and at the same time can't rely on tragic reality, social prejudice. Finally, Sean's boyfriend and Tebow said to stay and sleep. He looked at the others, the people on the left were chatting, and the space behind the small door on the right was Sean's cold body. Maybe Sean's mother thinks Sean's death is also a relief? Maybe Thibaut Sophie and the others are also thinking about how to use his ashes to make trouble again, another action. The pain of reality and the difficult contradictions of organizing a struggle will bring numbness. Death and sickness can't be stopped, but let's go on, otherwise what? What to do? At the beginning of the movie, an initial member of the act up died. Thibaud and the others introduced it, and then began to recruit new organizations. At the end of the movie, Sean also died and was also an initial member of the organization. After that, everyone continued like this. The reality has not changed. Sean's lyrical passage on the bus earlier said that AIDS has changed his life, really, he is an AIDS patient, that's all.
They have done a lot, stained the Seine with blood, marched, trumpeted, broke into classrooms and handed out brochures, and they don’t know if they can be understood by society. They won something from conquests and pharmaceutical companies. Can people understand when they look down at the red Seine? I still think it's too crazy, like those throwing blood bags and making trouble, maybe they can't do anything other than crazy.
I didn't like the whole movie at all before and after, but I didn't expect to see it. I originally watched it with big eyes. At the beginning of the weekly meeting, the footage felt a bit casual like a pseudo-documentary. The footage from the following parades was impressive, with cheerleaders in pink skirts, blood-stained Seine River, school propaganda, and a cross lying on the ground. There is also the transition between the disco scene and the virus, and the transition from the virus to the ocean. I'm not lucky enough to have AIDS, but I want to try to get to know them.
Think about it again, it's too sleepy.
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