Los Angeles Times

‘COLLECTIVE’ TRAGEDY

A fatal nightclub fire led Alexander Nanau to investigat­e the Romanian healthcare system. What he found was shocking.

- BY GREGORY ELLWOOD

The Romanian documentar­y follows the shocking fallout of a nightclub fire.

WHEN A FIRE swept through Bucharest’s Colectiv nightclub on Oct. 30, 2015, the result was a tragic loss of life that shook the Eastern European nation and the world. Twenty-seven people perished that night, and 184 were injured, including 146 who were immediatel­y hospitaliz­ed. On Nov. 4, following massive protests over a regime that allowed the venue to operate without a proper permit, the ruling government resigned.

But that turned out to be just the beginning of the story. A larger scandal was about to unfold, a tale that is captured as it happened in Alexander Nanau’s critically acclaimed documentar­y, “Collective.”

Romania’s Oscar submission in the academy’s internatio­nal film category and one of the best reviewed films in 2020, “Collective” slowly unearths shocking misconduct inside Romania’s health industry that is almost too horrifying to believe. Despite a population of more than 19 million people, the country’s hospitals were not equipped to treat the injured. Moreover, an unexpected number of patients died of burns that should have been easily treatable. Something was clearly wrong.

Nanau knew he wanted to chronicle the investigat­ions spurred by the protests and found his initial muse in Catalin Tolontan, a respected journalist who was on the trail of the story. Except, of course, he initially turned the filmmaker down. Nanau recalls, “He said, ‘No, our newsroom has to be protected. You can’t just come in with a camera.’ But I think the fact that he saw how serious we take things, that we were also digging into a lot of things and have sources inside the healthcare system, made him understand that we [took] it pretty seriously.”

Early on, Tolontan let them know that there were rumors that infections in the hospitals were the cause of the unexplaine­d deaths. Tolontan and his team discovered that Hexi Pharma, a private pharmaceut­ical company, had been selling watered-down cleaning supplies that led to massive bacteria outbreaks at hospitals across the country. Did they communicat­e that informatio­n to Nanau? Well, not exactly.

“The thing is, until they fully trusted us they had to be very cautious,” Nanau says. “They didn’t expect that I would come with one camera and maybe one sound man. And we, at the same time, didn’t know what they were doing, so I was just trying to cover their daily work and to put the puzzle pieces together, what they are following. And after a while I understood what they were doing.”

As the scandal grew into an indictment of decades-old government corruption, Nanau changed his main character and the film’s point of view halfway through the film. Although Tolontan still appears sporadical­ly, the focus shifts to Vlad Voiculescu, a nonpolitic­al appointee charged with keeping the Ministry of Health running until new elections were held.

“I heard that they are interviewi­ng this guy from outside politics, this patient activist. And I thought that might be the chance, because I really wanted to get inside the system. I wanted to see the same story from the other side,” Nanau says.

Voiculescu provided remarkable access as whistleblo­wers came forward and more burn victims succumbed to their bacterial infections. If Tolontan’s arc mirrored the Romanian people’s outrage over the growing affair, then Voiculescu’s portion delivered the horrifying heartbreak. Through three years of filming and editing, Nanau then had the daunting task of compressin­g the story and its emotional beats into a self-set limit of 90 minutes.

Nanau reflects on the challenge, noting, “It had to stay a universal story where we recognize how manipulati­on works, how power works, what’s the difference between quality informatio­n and fake news? I found all these things more important, because during filming in 2016, the world around us started to transform or to reveal itself as being very similar to Romania. Populists that really step on people’s rights and lives. And it started with Brexit. You had Trump. You had in the Philippine­s, Duterte. So, in a way, it was clear to me that suddenly the story we were filming was not any more a local story.”

It’s been over a year since “Collective” premiered at the 2019 Venice Film Festival and, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Nanau has had a good amount of time to reflect on his next endeavor.

“I feel that our perception of authentici­ty and our need for authentici­ty has changed a lot through the pandemic,” Nanau says. “So, I don’t know what the next thing will be ... but it will be that project where I feel like that’s the thing I need to tell now in the world we’re living in now.”

 ?? Magnolia Pictures ?? JOURNALIST CATALIN
Tolontan was at first the primary focus of “Collective.”
Magnolia Pictures JOURNALIST CATALIN Tolontan was at first the primary focus of “Collective.”

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