BPM (Beats Per Minute) ****
/ *****
Directed by: Robin Campillo.
Written by: Robin Campillo and Philippe
Mangeot.
Starring: Nahuel Pérez Biscayart (Sean
Dalmazo), Arnaud Valois (Nathan), Adèle Haenel (Sophie), Antoine Reinartz (Thibault),
Ariel Borenstein (Jérémie), Félix Maritaud (Max), Aloïse Sauvage (Eva), Simon
Bourgade (Luc), Médhi Touré (Germain), Simon Guélat (Markus), Coralie Russier (Muriel),
Catherine Vinatier (Hélène), Théophile Ray (Marco), Saadia Bentaïeb (Mère de
Sean).
The
French film BPM (Beats Per Minute) combines the political and the personal in a
way that reminds viewer that the two are forever intertwined, and we should
expect nothing different. The film takes place in the early 1990s, and focuses
on the Paris chapter of ACT UP – the AIDS organization that, through various
means, put pressure on governments and pharmaceutical companies to get
treatment to the many people living with HIV, and dying when they got AIDS as a
result.
The
film starts out in macro, showing us the group as a whole, first at a protest
when they storm the stage of a government spokesperson, and then in the weekly
ACT UP meeting, where the various people involved dissect what happened, and
disagree about its effectiveness. It’s clear from these scenes that not
everyone agrees on what to do, or how to proceed. Various people start to stand
out in the crowd. The group’s de facto leader is Thibault (Antoine Reinartz),
who wants to take a more diplomatic approach – reaching agreements with the
government and pharma companies in a non-confrontational way. Sean (Nahuel
Perez Biscayart) is almost the exact opposite – wanting to push these groups
buttons, and force them to do something, and rub their nose in the effects that
their policies are having on real people. Sophie (Adele Haenel) is somewhere in
between – seeing the value in both positions, but definitely willing to get her
hands dirty. While most in the group are gay men – many living with the disease
– that isn’t true of everyone. Among the groups other few female members is
Helene (Catherine Vinatier), who is there for her 16-year-old who has the
disease, which he got through a blood transfusion.
A
new face, Nathan (Arnaud Valois) shows up, and will change the course of the
movie. He gets more and more involved in the group sure – and has a voice – but
at first he is relatively quiet. He isn’t HIV positive, which draws some
suspicion, but he gradually gets closer to the action. He also falls in love
with Sean, and the two men’s relationship forms the emotional core of the film.
The last act basically abandons ACT UP to focus on their relationship, as Sean
gets sicker and sicker.
The
film is incredibly dense in terms of its dialogue – particularly in the
beginning – and it takes a while to really find your footing in the film, to
get to know the characters, and get on the films wavelength. In the earlier
going, the film is built around the various meetings – most of which will grow
contentious, and arguments are common – and the various actions the group takes.
It’s quite impressive how co-writer/director Robin Campillo, navigates these
scenes so that you’re not lost in them. I actually liked this part of the film
more than the final act. When the focus on the movie switches to the
relationship between Sean and Nathan, the film still works, but it’s also more
conventional. The point here is to show that the politics in the film are
personal – and have real consequences to those involved. It works, but it also
feels like other films we’ve seen before – while the first two acts felt like
something different, and more complex.
Still,
BPM never feels any less than vital and important, and although the film runs
nearly two-and-a-half hours, it never grows dull or repetitive – it earns that
runtime throughout, and makes an important statement – not just about the past,
but also the present.
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