The story of the discovery of the AIDS epidemic and the political infighting of 
the scientific community hampering the early fight against the virus. Enjoy.

Poster




Studio - Home Box Office (HBO)






IMDB Link








http://www.imdb. com/title/ tt0106273/

Details

Director : Roger Spottiswoode
Producer : Midge Sanford, Sarah Pillsbury
Cast: Matthew Modine, Alan Alda, Lily Tomlin, Ian McKellen, Richard Gere, 
Anjelica Huston, Steve Martin, Phil Collins
Duration : 2 hours 15 mins
Quality : DVDRip, Good

Review

This film rendition of Randy Shilts's documentary book by the same name tells 
the scientific, political, and human story of the first five years of AIDS in 
the U.S.--roughly 1980-85. Mainly it is a story of dedicated medical 
researchers groping to understand the horrifying and mysterious new disease and 
simultaneously battling the public fear and indifference that prevented, during 
those Reagan years, both public funding of their research and acceptance of 
their findings.

The central figure is Dr. Don Francis (Matthew Modine), veteran of the World 
Health Organization' s smallpox eradication program, and the horrifying 
outbreak of haemorrhagic fever along the Ebola River in central Africa in 1976. 
Working at the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta with no money and no 
space, Francis pursues his theory that AIDS is caused by a sexually-transmitte 
d virus on the model of feline leukaemia. His individual antagonist is Dr. 
Robert Gallo (Alan Alda), the discoverer of HTLV (the human T-cell leukemia 
virus), who cuts off assistance when he hears that Francis has shared some 
experimental materials with French researchers. (Gallo sees the French team 
mainly as his rivals for a Nobel prize.) Gallo finally claims a French 
retrovirus discovery as his own and thereby acquires a coveted patent.

Besides lab work and big scientific egos, the film shows us lots of 
grass-roots, shoe-leather epidemiology, especially in San Francisco; the 
laborious questioning of AIDS patients about their sexual histories, in search 
of the chain of infection and its beginning, "patient zero." The film's plot 
ends with Reagan's 1984 re-election and Francis's departure for San Francisco 
to set up as an independent researcher. Preceding the credits are a number of 
updates that take AIDS and the story's heroes and villains from 1985 to 1993, 
all this appearing over stills of famous AIDS victims and crusaders. 

This highly ironic film is true to Randy Shilts's view of his subject as a 
"national failure." A wing of the American house was burning down, and all but 
a few were determinedly looking in the other direction. The U.S. Congress, the 
President, directors of blood banks, and certain religious talk-shows show up 
as cowardly, ignorant, or both. Heterosexuals are not the only problem, as the 
film shows gay men reluctant to give up their sexual revolution, and the gay 
owners of bathhouses unwilling to voluntarily close their highly profitable 
centres of infection.

One of the most effective of the film's many uses of actual news footage begins 
with a jubilant crowd celebrating Reagan's re-election. As the crowd begins 
shouting "Four more years!" that sound track is maintained and the visuals 
shift to scenes of disfigured men dying in California hospitals. Four more 
years, indeed.

The film does well with some of the complexities of science and their political 
consequences. In Atlanta the research team meets repeatedly to ask, "What do we 
think? What do we know? What can we prove?" The proving, of course, is hard, 
and the researchers' cooperative challenging gives non-scientists a good look 
at science being done.

On the political and ironic side, science's high standards for proof repeatedly 
give narrow interests a respectable- seeming cover for their reluctance to deal 
with AIDS. Sometimes even good-hearted idealism seems to set things back, as 
when Don Francis's frustration with the narrow vision of others occasionally 
leads him to say impolitic things. Over the whole film, in flashbacks through 
Francis's point of view, hangs the shadow of Ebola, its enigma and awful 
lethality.

Links


Code
http://rapidshare. com/files/ 181048568/ And_The_Band_ Played_On. avi.009
http://rapidshare. com/files/ 181097200/ And_The_Band_ Played_On. avi.008
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http://rapidshare. com/files/ 181085086/ And_The_Band_ Played_On. avi.006
http://rapidshare. com/files/ 181078519/ And_The_Band_ Played_On. avi.005
http://rapidshare. com/files/ 181072773/ And_The_Band_ Played_On. avi.004
http://rapidshare. com/files/ 181066694/ And_The_Band_ Played_On. avi.003
http://rapidshare. com/files/ 181060968/ And_The_Band_ Played_On. avi.002
http://rapidshare. com/files/ 181054480/ And_The_Band_ Played_On. avi.001

Screencaps





 


 


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