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On 4 February 2018, a group of Christian protesters holding icons and singing church chants disrupted the screening of BPM at the Romanian Peasant Museum in Bucharest. It has been released in France on 23 August 2017 as scheduled. With the number of films at the Toronto International Film Festival being reduced from 2016, BPM (Beats per Minute) was nevertheless selected for the 2017 festival in September. On 24 June, it went to the Moscow International Film Festival, followed by the New Zealand International Film Festival in July. The film had its world premiere at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival on.
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Release ĭirector Robin Campillo and his cast attend the 2017 Cannes Film Festival.
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The budget of $5 million was raised in months. Īt Cannes, Campillo explained his decision to go ahead with directing the film, saying " BPM is above all a film I wanted to make where the force of words transforms into pure moments of action". Co-screenwriter Philippe Mangeot was also involved in ACT UP. One scene was also based on his experience with the AIDS epidemic, as he said "I've dressed up a boyfriend on his death".
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Samuel Churin as Gilberti (Melton Pharm)ĭirector Robin Campillo co-wrote the screenplay, describing himself as "an ACT UP militant in the '90s", meaning he did not have to carry out any other investigation into how to accurately portray the experience.As per Sean's wishes, later they invade a health insurance conference, throwing his ashes over the conference-goers and their food. When Sean is released from hospital to Nathan's apartment for end-of-life care, Nathan euthanizes him. Nathan offers to care for Sean as he gets worse. Sean is already exhibiting signs of the disease's progression and soon his T-cell count is down to 160. Sean got HIV when he was sixteen from his married maths teacher. Nathan and Sean start a sexual relationship, and discuss their sexual histories. Newcomer Nathan, a gay man who doesn't live with HIV, begins to fall in love with the passionate veteran Sean, who is HIV-positive. Per his wishes, the group parades in the streets after his death, putting his name and face to the ranks of AIDS victims.
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Foreshadowing later events in the movie, Jeremie, a youth who lives with HIV in the group sees his health deteriorate rapidly. The film gradually shifts from the political storyline of ACT UP's actions to the personal stories of ACT UP members. To some this is against ACT-UP principles as prison is an unsafe place where people get HIV. Helene had pushed for politicians to be tried and jailed for their mishandling of blood screening (which is how her son got HIV). But soon some radicals have attacked Helene, the mother of a teenager who contracted HIV through blood transfusion. A deaf person points out they can do direct action AND pursue meetings with the labs. The film shows a number of large meetings in a lecture theatre where the radical element demand more direct action and others aim to bring the scientists to meetings where they can get them to communicate results sooner. ACT UP struggles to plan a more effective Gay Pride parade than in previous years, bemoaning the depressing, "zombie" atmosphere the AIDS epidemic had created. While ACT UP makes some headway with its public protests, its members fiercely debate the group's strategy, with conflicting goals of showmanship and persuasion, with conflicting aesthetics of positivity and misery.
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When the pharmaceutical company Melton Pharm announces its plans to reveal its HIV trial results at a prominent pharmaceutical conference the following year, ACT UP invades its offices with fake blood and demands it release its trial results immediately. While the French government has declared its intent to support HIV/AIDS sufferers, ACT UP stages public protests against their sluggish pace, accusing the government of censoring and minimizing the fight against the virus. In the early 1990s, a group of HIV/AIDS activists associated with the Paris chapter of ACT UP struggle to effect action to fight the AIDS epidemic.