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Not perfect -- but necessary.

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15-3-2021 06:05:07 Mobile | Show all posts |Read mode
Much has been made about the "good guys" and "bad guys" portrayed in "And The Band Played On".  And with good reason.  I can't help wonder what personal agendas are being followed when a prominent 'real-life' scientist like Dr. Robert Gallo (Alan Alda) is portrayed in such a shallow way.  But simultaneously, the filmmakers coyly hide the fact from us that Richard Gere's choreographer is "A Chorus Line" creator Michael Bennett. They withhold that information like "The Simpsons" hide which state Springfield is in.  With a wink of an eye.

While these imperfections in the film can be distracting, they are also quite trivial.  What many overlook is that "And The Band Plays On" is first...and foremost...a story of DENIAL.

Throughout the first act, there is a reluctance to accept the seriousness of "GRID" ("Gay Related Immune Deficiency").  Once there is no escaping the growing horror, the film accurately describes how all parties (The C-D-C, Bill Krause, gay groups, Jerry Falwell, blood banks, Gallo, The Reagan Administration, etc.) react to preserve their own best interests. And while those special interests clash on how to proceed next, thousands of helpless people keep dying. (There's your tie-in to the Titanic-inspired title).

In the spirit of Jimmy Stewart and Gary Cooper, Matthew Modine is best-suited to playing an 'everyman'. Modine's 'everyman' in this film (Dr. Don Francis)understands the growing, deadly consequences of H-I-V, but has his own ghosts to exorcise (an Ebola plague victim who grabs his wrist, covering it in blood).  While Modine's character is the voice of reason, he is not immune from reacting irrationally to this plague.  It is only at the end of the film, as he comforts the dying Bill Krause, that Francis begins to overcome his own fears.

The message of this film is simple:  We must be "pro-active" in addressing our problems.  For if we wait for a "reactive" response, the resulting panic and confusion will only make things worse.  In that respect,"And The Band Plays On" is one of the most important films to be made during the 1990s.  For even with it's minor distractions, inaccuracies and agendas -- it truly is "MUST SEE T-V".

score /10

Newsmeister75349 19 May 2002

Reprint: https://www.imdb.com/review/rw0317788/
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