Los Angeles Times

LOVE AND HEARTBREAK

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BY GREGORY ELLWOOD >>> A family dealing with the aftershock of being notif ied that their son has been killed while on active duty. A transgende­r woman disrespect­ed by the family of her fallen lover. A community f ighting a government bureaucrac­y that won’t distribute life- saving drugs to AIDS patients. These are just a few of the subjects this year in what is an always diverse crop of submission­s for the foreign- language f ilm Oscar. Only f ive will make the f inal cut, but they each have the power to illuminate with audiences and voters.

‘ BPM ( Beats Per Minute)’

To say Robin Campillo’s latest film means a lot to him is something of an understate­ment. The out, gay filmmaker remembers attending film school in Paris in his early 20s and, like many, being traumatize­d by the outbreak of the AIDS epidemic then referred to as “gay cancer.” It took him decades to tell the story of the men and women who made up ACT UP Paris, an activist group he joined in the early ’ 90s. With thousands of people dying, the group used public demonstrat­ions and acts of civil disobedien­ce first implemente­d by ACT UP New York to demand the French government and pharmaceut­ical companies distribute HIV- suppressin­g therapies more quickly.

It was during a break from filming his 2013 drama “Eastern Boys” that Campillo was finally compelled to revisit this part of his life.

He recalls, “We were talking about the shoot and I said to my friend [ and producer] Hugues Charbonnea­u, ‘ I want more days of shooting,’ and he said, ‘ I owe you nothing.’ and I said, ‘ You owe me big because I dressed up your boyfriend when he died.’ Just like a private joke, but I realized that people around us were, like, ‘ What's going on?’”

The two men explained to the other members of the crew that Campillo had dressed the body of Charbonnea­u’s boyfriend after he died from AIDS, a heartbreak­ing moment that eventually was incorporat­ed into “BPM.” At the time, the revelation prompted Campillo’s other producer, Marie- Ange Luciani, to make this important story his next priority. She told him, “You won't have any new projects, you'll do this film and you stop thinking of other projects."

“The strange thing is that we were in a restaurant and the owner of the restaurant was an actor too and his boyfriend died too.”

Almost from the first frame, Samuel Maoz’s three- act drama is something of a gut- punch. The first act finds a Tel Aviv couple ( Lior Ashkenazi, Sarah Adler) coping with the shock of being informed their oldest child ( Yonaton Shiray) has been killed in the line of duty as a member of the Israeli Defense Forces. It was inspired by an experience Maoz had with his teenage daughter many years before.

“My eldest daughter went to high school but she never made it on time. In order to not be late, she used to order a taxi. This cost us a bunch of money and one morning I asked her to take the bus,” Maoz recalls. “She'd be late, but she'd learn the hard way to get up in time. A half- hour after she left I saw on a news website that [ a bomb exploded on her line] and dozens of people were killed. I called her but [ no one answered].

He continues, “One hour later she returned home. She was late for the bus that exploded, and she missed it and took the next one. I experience­d I can say the worst hour of my life. Worse than the Lebanon War. And I asked myself, ‘ What can I learn from it?’ ”

The second part of “Foxtrot” is markedly different as it focuses on the son’s life with three fellow soldiers at a pointless checkpoint in the middle of nowhere. It’s decidedly surreal compared to the first and third acts and that was intentiona­l on Maoz’s part.

“I built an emotional journey that I want the audience to experience,” he says. “I told people that the first sequence should show and shape. The second sequence should hypnotize and the third should be moving.”

That third sequence revisits the family six months later as they are still recovering from the earlier events, but there is a glimmer of hope in their own futures.

“It's an allegory to Israeli society,” Maoz says.

 ?? The Orchard ?? NAHUEL Pérez Biscayart stars in “BPM ( Beats Per Minute),” the story of the men and women of ACT UP Paris.
The Orchard NAHUEL Pérez Biscayart stars in “BPM ( Beats Per Minute),” the story of the men and women of ACT UP Paris.
 ?? Giora Bejach ?? A DEATH in service of the Israeli Defense Forces reverberat­es through a family in “Foxtrot.” Yonatan Shiray is shown as a soldier at a lonely desert checkpoint.
Giora Bejach A DEATH in service of the Israeli Defense Forces reverberat­es through a family in “Foxtrot.” Yonatan Shiray is shown as a soldier at a lonely desert checkpoint.

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