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Fire in the Blood

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India · 2013
1h 24m
Director Dylan Mohan Gray
Starring Zackie Achmat, Peter Mugyenyl, Bill Clinton, William Hurt
Genre Documentary

FIRE IN THE BLOOD recounts the history of the uphill battle a small coalition of activists faced in their fight against Western governments in pharmaceutical companies to deliver low-cost AIDS drugs to millions of afflicted people all across the Global South. The unwillingness of the large institutions to budge would ultimately lead to the probable deaths of more than 10 million people worldwide.

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What are critics saying?

60

Time Out by

The film strikes the right balance of outrage, hopefulness and despair, compellingly arguing the case that a profit-driven, racially motivated collusion exists between Big Pharma and the U.S. government.

90

Salon by Andrew O'Hehir

I hope viewers don’t come away from this essential documentary with the belief that Western AIDS activists in general turned their backs on poor black people just as soon as they got medicine that worked. That isn’t remotely fair. Blame for the African AIDS holocaust falls on the Big Pharma companies who put patents and profits ahead of human life, and on all of us who let them get away with it.

25

Slant Magazine by Diego Semerene

It produces a collection of one-dimensional facts strung together with an utmost respect for chronology and documentary-making's most stale conventions.

90

Variety by Guy Lodge

Though the film comprehensively details the political and economic subtleties of what it declares “the crime of the century,” its narrative remains primarily a human-focused one, highlighting the stories of selected steadfast victims, as well as the heroic movers and shakers in the struggle.

70

The New York Times by Miriam Bale

This virtuous stance is not unusual for issue-based documentaries, but a film with such illuminating content deserves a more artful vehicle for its moving message.

60

Time Out London by Trevor Johnston

As a study in human greed this is shocking, but as this thorough, convincing, if slightly stodgy film makes clear, it’s also a moment to mobilise public opinion and shape change.

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