How to Survive a Plague

NEW DOCS

In the early 1980s when the number of AIDS cases in America began to soar, many organizations with the resources to help turned a blind eye to the epidemic. Enter ACT UP, a group of activists who felt they’d been backed into a corner by society’s complacent attitudes. Many of ACT UP’s members were HIV-positive and saw this unifying political action as their only hope of survival. In a two-pronged attack strategy, the group sought to raise awareness through high-profile protests, while simultaneously infiltrating the scientific community to help steer research toward a manageable cure. This film recounts their epic journey almost entirely through the use of archival footage, providing a firsthand account of the heated meetings and desperate emotions that would eventually fracture the group but at the time were instrumental in finding a cure. How to Survive a Plague is a gripping historical account of the movement culled from hundreds of hours of existing footage. The result is a beautiful testament to those who never gave up the fight for change.  RM

Director

David France

Producers

David France, Howard Gertler

Executive Producers

Joy Tomchin, Dan Cogan

Editors

T. Woody Richman, Tyler Walk

Cinematographer

Derek Wiesehahn

Release Year

2012

Festival Year

2012

Country

United States

Run Time

120 minutes