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IMDbPro

Les soldats de l'espérance

Original title: And the Band Played On
  • TV Movie
  • 1993
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 21m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Matthew Modine in Les soldats de l'espérance (1993)
On this IMDbrief, we'll download the history of the first movies to raise our collective awareness of HIV/AIDS.
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Watch How Movies and TV Shaped Our Perception of HIV/AIDS
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93 Photos
DramaHistory

The story of the discovery of the AIDS epidemic, and the political infighting of the scientific community hampering the early fight with it.The story of the discovery of the AIDS epidemic, and the political infighting of the scientific community hampering the early fight with it.The story of the discovery of the AIDS epidemic, and the political infighting of the scientific community hampering the early fight with it.

  • Director
    • Roger Spottiswoode
  • Writers
    • Randy Shilts
    • Arnold Schulman
  • Stars
    • Matthew Modine
    • Alan Alda
    • Patrick Bauchau
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Roger Spottiswoode
    • Writers
      • Randy Shilts
      • Arnold Schulman
    • Stars
      • Matthew Modine
      • Alan Alda
      • Patrick Bauchau
    • 66User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 3 Primetime Emmys
      • 11 wins & 23 nominations total

    Videos1

    How Movies and TV Shaped Our Perception of HIV/AIDS
    Clip 4:54
    How Movies and TV Shaped Our Perception of HIV/AIDS

    Photos93

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    Top cast99+

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    Matthew Modine
    Matthew Modine
    • Dr. Don Francis
    Alan Alda
    Alan Alda
    • Dr. Robert Gallo
    Patrick Bauchau
    Patrick Bauchau
    • Dr. Luc Montagnier
    Nathalie Baye
    Nathalie Baye
    • Dr. Françoise Barre
    Christian Clemenson
    Christian Clemenson
    • Dr. Dale Lawrence
    David Clennon
    David Clennon
    • Mr. Johnstone
    Phil Collins
    Phil Collins
    • Eddie Papasano
    Bud Cort
    Bud Cort
    • Antique shop owner
    Alex Courtney
    Alex Courtney
    • Dr. Mika Popovic
    David Dukes
    David Dukes
    • Dr. Mervyn Silverman
    Richard Gere
    Richard Gere
    • The Choreographer
    David Marshall Grant
    David Marshall Grant
    • Dennis Seeley
    Ronald Guttman
    Ronald Guttman
    • Dr. Jean-Claude Chermann
    Glenne Headly
    Glenne Headly
    • Dr. Mary Guinan
    Anjelica Huston
    Anjelica Huston
    • Dr. Betsy Reisz
    Ken Jenkins
    Ken Jenkins
    • Dr. Dennis Donohue
    Richard Jenkins
    Richard Jenkins
    • Dr. Marc Conant
    Tchéky Karyo
    Tchéky Karyo
    • Dr. Willy Rozenbaum
    • Director
      • Roger Spottiswoode
    • Writers
      • Randy Shilts
      • Arnold Schulman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews66

    7.811.4K
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    Featured reviews

    10Nocgirl72

    Awesome book and movie.

    I read this book in high school in the late 80's just as it was released. The book was excellent and gave a great educational lesson on HIV and AIDS. The movie was just as good. I was really touched at the end when "The last song" by Elton John was playing. The movie gave a great time-line of the virus.

    It is so terrifying to think AIDS has actually been around since probably 1959 when a blood sample from a man from the Congo had died of a mysterious illness, and tests run on the blood sample today showed he did indeed have AIDS. The movie was very touching, this whole topic leaves a lump in my throat. I was 13 when AIDS had started making the news and in 1985 or 1986 my dad had a blood transfusion. We spend months worrying if he had contracted HIV. Thank god he got clean blood and he dodged a bullet, unlike the 25,000 people in the 70 and 80's who received tainted blood.

    I got teary eyed when an HIV+ guy in the movie says "This is not a political issue. This is a health issue. This is not a gay issue. This is a human issue. And I do not intend to be defeated by it. I came here today in the hope that my epitaph would not read that I died of red tape."

    The predictions were accurate. The scientists predicted there would be 40 million people worldwide infected with HIV by the turn of the century and that number has proved to be pretty much dead on, literally.
    10lambiepie-2

    If this film doesn't touch you, you have no heart

    HBO was beginning to choose projects other networks were afraid to touch. And the Band Played On is one of their all time top ten. The actors who participated in this film were only paid scale, and not a lot of money was used, but the message is the strongest. I viewed this on its premiere and couldn't sleep afterward. I view it more these days since I've had many friends die of "red tape" of AIDS.

    According to this film based in Randy's book, what bothers me the most was the opportunities that existed by several people to catch this disease at various stages and it just wasn't done. Sure the government played its part, but so did commerce, so did vanity and so did the need for humans to be sexual beings.

    Since the film I've read about the deaths of many as well as experienced deaths myself. One thing that stands out is "Patient Zero". The family of this gentleman has fought long and hard for that stigma to be erased. As the character says in the film: "If I got it, then someone gave it to me". I do understand terms that mark things as "the beginning" of the identified problem but with this film you will know there was a beginning BEFORE THAT beginning. Where it lies is still a mystery.

    On the other hand if America could have shared information with other countries and paid closer attention we could have fought this is a world problem before it got to the point of where it did. But America was too busy allocating more money to military defense than to the medical defense.

    America had discoverable AIDS cases as far back as the 1950's, but it didn't reach total epidemic status until the late 1970's early 1980's. This film brings that information out. It also brings out the information that this disease, although concentrated in the gay community, had no specific target, anyone could/would get it. The people in my life were not all homosexual who contracted the disease but a few were just receivers of blood transfusions. At the time they received the blood, the test was not developed for screening. Just like the film points out, they too (family, friends, associates) suffered.

    There is so much to grab in this film, one or two viewings isn't enough. One or two pointed fingers is not the answer. It is equally as sad that almost 10 years later, I am writing this review and the band is still playing. It was my prayer that this would not be so.
    Newsmeister75349

    Not perfect -- but necessary.

    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".
    7moonspinner55

    "It may seem a little hopeless." ... "That's because it is."

    American doctors from the underfunded Center for Disease Control scramble to figure out the origin of--and the causes behind--the alarming rate of homosexual male deaths in the early 1980s. As the fatal strain of pneumonia and hepatitis B cases begin appearing, politicos in Reagan-era D. C. veto the mysterious disease as non-newsworthy; meanwhile, members of the gay community are not shown to be radically adept at helping their own cause, labeling the early cases as products of the Gay Cancer. Adaptation of Randy Shilts' frightening, groundbreaking book has an all-star cast but impresses mainly with its handling of the packed narrative, particularly when detailing the CDC's battles in coming up with an inexpensive way of filtering out contaminated blood from the National Blood Supply. Making a movie from the source material was seemingly an impossible undertaking, and yet HBO Films and co-producer Aaron Spelling manage to lay all Shilts' information out adroitly and adeptly. Some of the character interaction is awkwardly interjected, but most of the principal players do very good work with their technical roles. Alan Alda positively revels in the opportunity to play sniveling medical scientist Dr. Robert Gallo, who felt usurped when French scientists initially gained prestige for isolating the virus; as Dr. Mary Guinan, Glenne Headly does some of the best work of her career (while interviewing a sexually promiscuous airline steward, one of the earliest men to fall prey to the disease, Headly is remarkably natural and charming); and Saul Rubinek as Dr. Curran, who initiates the investigation and helps sort out all the jargon, is in masterful form. Some of the high-profile cameos stick out as artifices--such as Richard Gere's bit as a stricken choreographer--though it is commendable to see these marquee names taking part in the project. "Band" isn't compact--it isn't a quick-fix wallow or a time-filler--instead, it's a serious, frustrating, angry movie with no easy answers...and that's as it should be.
    10annadams95340

    Excellent as was the book it's taken from

    I decided to watch this movie again tonight for the first time in several years. I lived in San Francisco when the epidemic began and had a first hand view of the fear, paranoia, and grief.

    The movie brings back memories of worrying about my gay child and many of my friends. We attended more than a few memorial services. My son, praise be, is fine.

    The best thing about watching it so many years later is to realize how far we've come since then. AIDS is no longer the death sentence it once was. The book and the film did a great deal to raise public awareness. HBO was courageous, the actors were all first class and I believe it was realistic in its portrayal of the heroes, the villains, and the public ignorance and apathy of the time.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Richard Gere accepted a small role, he broke taboos about the subject, and major movie stars taking small parts in television productions. Subsequently, Steve Martin, Alan Alda, Phil Collins, and Anjelica Huston were willing to appear.
    • Goofs
      The movie presents January 4, 1983 as the date when the term AIDS was created in a proposition in the CDC, in Atlanta. The real meeting where the term was developed was July 27, 1982, and the reunion took place in Washington. (Source: Time Magazine)
    • Quotes

      Blood Bank executive: Is the CDC seriously suggesting that the blood industry spends $100M a year to use the test for the wrong disease because we have a handful of transfusion fatalities and eight dead hemophiliacs?

      Dr. Don Francis: How many dead hemophiliacs do you need? How many people have to die to make it cost effecient for you people to do something about it? A hundred? A thousand? Give us a number so we won't annoy you again until the amount of money you begin spending on lawsuits make it more profitable for you to save people than to kill them.

    • Alternate versions
      In 1999, the end credit scrolls were rewritten to show updated AIDS statistics.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Man Without a Face/Wilder Napalm/King of the Hill/Hard Target/And the Band Played On (1993)
    • Soundtracks
      The Last Song
      Written by Elton John and Bernie Taupin

      Performed by Elton John

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 11, 1993 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Danish
    • Also known as
      • And the Band Played On
    • Filming locations
      • San Francisco, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • HBO Films
      • Spelling Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $8,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 21m(141 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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