Culture Interviews Cinema & Tv

120 BPM: An interview with Nahuel Pérez Biscayart and Arnaud Valois

120 BPM: An interview with Nahuel Pérez Biscayart and Arnaud Valois

120 BPM is visceral documentary-style French-language film about AIDS activists, the ACT UP movement, in Paris in the late 80s from director Robin Campillo.

Arnaud Valois and Nahuel Pérez Biscayart lead alongside Adèle Haenel as the young Parisiens pushing for medical research to battle the HIV-AIDs epidemic via any (and often bold) means possible. With Campillio himself having been part of the movement, the blood, sweat and tears poured into the cause are palpable on the screen.

The film has already stirred up a storm at the Paris box office after winning the Grand Prix at Cannes and is now set for UK release this week.

We sat down with breakthrough actor Arnaud Valois and Argentinian actor Nahuel Pérez Biscayart about their preparation for playing their roles, the challenges and opportunities offered by creating a movie with such intensity and the themes around activism and discrimination that can be compared and contrasted to today.

Sarah Bradbury

120 BPM (Beats per Minute) is released in select cinemas on 6th April 2018. Read our review here.

More in Cinema & Tv

Hemsworth, Ruffalo, Berry and Keoghan face off in high-stakes thriller Crime 101

The editorial unit

Kelly Reilly returns to crime drama in Sky’s Under Salt Marsh – full trailer released

The editorial unit

Dennis Kelly’s Waiting for the Out brings philosophical tension to BBC One – first trailer released

The editorial unit

Teaser drops for season two of Paradise, landing on Disney+ this February

The editorial unit

“Every day you get another opportunity to redeem yourself; this series really shows that”: An interview with the cast of My Hero Academia on the final season

Mae Trumata

“We don’t make eye candy, we make eye protein”: Guillermo del Toro on Frankenstein

Selina Sondermann

Christmas, Again

Antonia Georgiou

Marty Supreme

Christopher Connor

“The point of relationships is to grow”: Bing Liu on Preparation for the Next Life

Sarah Bradbury