This was the first big Brazilian drama that HBO worked on, and it’s a five-episode miniseries that lasts almost five hours in total. It’s a really emotional and political story set in Rio de Janeiro during the late 1980s, and it does a great job of showing what that era felt like while the country was dealing with the HIV/AIDS crisis. Since the world feels so divided today, the show is a beautiful reminder of how queer people can find power by standing together when things are hard. The story is actually based on real things that happened, specifically about flight attendants who smuggled AIDS medicine from the US into Brazil in the 80s. It works as both a history drama and a strong political message. The show is mostly about three people: Nando, his best friend Lea (they both work as flight attendants for Fly Brasil), and Raul, who is a performer and an activist. A lot of the story happens at a club called Paradise, which was one of the few open gay clubs back in the 80s. Nando is a h...
Desert Migration is a documentary that tells the story of a generation of HIV-positive men who have been afforded new life through the introduction of AIDS combating drugs, but still struggle with a number of internal and external problems associated with the virus. The film follows the stories of about a dozen HIV+ men in their 50s and 60s who are currently living in Palm Springs, California.
It focuses on a group of men, who had given up on life when they were diagnosed until medicines started showing up that could help HIV converting to AIDS. While these medicines gave these men a new lease of life, but now suddenly all these men have to plan to live and put back their life together, something that they had given up on. It follows a sort of day-in-the-life of these men, watching them as they eat breakfast, brush their teeth, take medication, smoke a cigarette, go to the gym, do yoga, paint, have dinner with friends, or go out drinking and dancing at a bar. They discuss wasting, fatigue, show us their sores and list the ways they’ve tried to maintain their bodies. It’s frank, eye-opening and far from the pervasive belief that HIV is now a once-a-day pill and no side effects.
The film provides a window into the lives of these men, and the voiceover format makes it feel like a conversation. It is a beautiful portrait of a population not often viewed, discussed, or even given voice within the LGBTQ+ community. “How do you deal with the fact that you lived in a war zone where people were literally dropping dead all around you and nobody even acknowledged the fact that it went on?” said one man in the film. Although strides have been made in the last 30 years to be sure, the battle for equality is far from over. There is something relatable about this documentary that reminds us that HIV has not been eradicated, and that living with HIV – while not the death sentence it once was – still poses its own set of problems. It does get very wordy at some point because you are following 10-12 different individuals and in a typical documentary style, you cut from one person to another and hear tidbits about their life. Given that there were so many subjects, it was easy to lose track of what an individual's story was. Having said that, spit hits shortcomings, this documentary was definitely an interesting watch for sure. It is about optimism and how to find ways to survive in a society which wasn't made for you, and which would often rather pretend you didn't exist. (6/10)

Comments