2011 will mark 30 years since AIDS descended. Director David Weissman tells the story of the first wave and how the gay community was affected by the outburst of HIV and AIDS through the eyes of 5 witnesses and indirect victims of the epidemic.

When the first cases of AIDS were announced thirty years ago, San Francisco was particularly affected. Even then, the city was a centre of the American gay movement; all at once, AIDS was considered in no uncertain terms to be the ‘gay plague’ and those infected by the virus were stigmatised as victims of an immoral lifestyle. At the time, San Francisco’s reaction to the disease was uniquely compassionate, diverse and creative – and was dubbed the ‘San Francisco model’. The city had had a progressive infrastructure since the 1960s; committed citizens and the members of a highly politicised gay community clustered around Castro Street. Together, they surmounted the barriers that began to pile up as a result of the prevalent anti-gay mood and the well-known inadequacies of America’s health system.


This film is about five citizens of the city who all lived in San Francisco before AIDS was a problem. The disease has changed their lives in ways that, back then, they would never have imagined. Overnight the city was transformed from an enclave of sexual liberation and social experimentation to the epicentre of a dreadful, sexually transmitted epidemic. Seen from the point of view of five citizens of San Francisco – caregivers, activists, researchers, friends and sufferers – all of whom have been directly affected by the disease, the film makes use of copious archive material to illuminate not merely the personal but also the social challenges of the era in all its complexity.

More information on the movie on the official wewerehere website.

Last opportunity to watch the movie during Berlinale: Saturday, 19.02 – buy your tickets here

Leave Your thought on this post

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.