Buddies review: the original gay Aids drama is still one of the best
The late Arthur J Bressan Jr’s intimate 1985 two-hander, now digitally restored, depicts the Reagan-era Aids crisis with an honesty and anger straight from the source, writes Alex Davidson.
Originally released in 1985, now restored in 2K and receiving a theatrical rerelease, Buddies is the first feature film to have depicted the Aids crisis. Directed by Arthur J Bressan Jr, who divided his professional life between making gay porn and creating documentaries and dramas about gay men, it’s an intimate two-hander about the relationship between Robert (Geoff Edholm), an Aids patient, and David (David Schachter), his volunteer companion, or ‘buddy’. Bressan Jr himself died from an Aids-related illness two years after the film was released.
USA 1985
Certificate 15 75m 46s
Director Arthur J. Bressan Jr
Cast
Robert Willow Geoff Edholm
David Bennett David Schachter
Edward Billy Lux
Steve David Rose
Mrs Bennett Libby Saines
gym instructor Damon Hairston
nurse Tracy Vivat
Sylvia Douglas Susan Schneider
Lynn Joyce Korn
[1.37:1]
Digitally restored
UK release date 6 December 2019
Distributor Peccadillo Pictures Ltd
peccapics.com/buddies
► Trailer
Buddies has a directness and candour that put later films about Aids (which would become a gay movie subgenre over the next decade) to shame, generally eschewing good taste in favour of honesty, despite a solemn, strings-laden score. Robert is a man who talks about sex frequently, shocking the prudish David. When David, a privileged yuppie with a supportive family, criticises a gay parade, he is fiercely rebuked by the marginalised Robert, who sees it as the one day when heteronormative society has to acknowledge the existence of LGBT+ people.
Bressan Jr’s film is full of fury, both explicit and subtle. It takes aim at the Reagan administration’s failure to act on the Aids crisis, and hits its target again and again. Compare this with the glossy Oscar-winning theatrics of Tom Hanks’s opera scene in Philadelphia (1993) and the pugnacious spirit of Buddies seems even more potent. Yes, it’s appalling that young men are dying, but the tragedy must be coupled with a fierce resolve to fight back – a battle cry ignored by so many Aids dramas of the era, which got lost in the excitement of A-list straight actors playing tragic gay victims.
Edholm, who also died from Aids-related illness in 1989, has an arresting scene where he chokes with anger when he reads a homophobic article stating that Aids is God’s punishment on gay men. Yet the most powerful sequence pulsates with an understated rage; a final overhead shot of the White House cuts to a printer churning out an endless list of those who have died from Aids-related illness.
Buddies’ authenticity is its greatest strength. This is a rare film from the era, made by and about gay men, and it movingly evokes the loneliness and isolation of so many with Aids. Robert never leaves his hospital room, where he lies alone, surrounded by messages warning medics to exert caution around Aids patients.
His once rampant sex life has been reduced to masturbating, alone – a situation that appals him. While other characters appear in the film, they are only in scenes with David outside the hospital, heard on the telephone or seen with their back to the camera. This is Robert and David’s story, after all. While the performances are adequate rather than strong – Schachter is ill at ease in the earlier scenes – Bressan’s sharp screenplay, along with an effectiveness in giving a human face to gay men with Aids in an era when homophobia born of panic was rife, makes Buddies an invaluable piece of queer film history.