A few days back here in Sundance I caught a screening of David France's astonishingly powerful documentary "How To Survive a Plague." A chronicle of AIDS activism in New York, the film shows how a group of men and women fought against a remarkably homophobic establishment to help bring life-saving drugs to America. The film moved me so much that I decided to check out a public screening the next day just so I could take in one of the Q&As (there wasn't one at the industry screening I initially attended). And as expected, it was pretty powerful stuff:
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@kellyoxford Genius! @peterknegt
Posted 1 day ago
RT @indiewire: Not at Cannes? @peterknegt offers suggestions for your very own No-Cannes-Do film festival instead: http://t.co/IpED12NTma
Posted 3 days ago
RT @JasonGuerrasio: Love @peterknegt's No-Cannes-Do film fest suggestions: http://t.co/3AVd4nMomq via @indiewire
Posted 3 days ago
RT @JasonGuerrasio: Love @peterknegt's No-Cannes-Do film fest suggestions: http://t.co/3AVd4nMomq via @indiewire
Posted 3 days ago
1 Comment
dylan | January 27, 2012 11:49 AM
Lawsuits have been filed in the circuit courts against Sundance, anyone who has ever submitted a film and has been rejected may be involved with a 'class action' lawsuit against Sundance for theft, fraud, see Scam Fest the Movie www.sundancefilmfestival2012.com