Skip to content

Buddies (Newly Restored)

Barcode 5060265151225
Blu-ray

Original price £8.24 - Original price £8.24
Original price £8.24
£8.24
£8.24 - £8.24
Current price £8.24

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
in stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 09/12/2019

Region Code: Blu-ray B
Certificate: BBFC 15
Label: Peccadillo Pictures
Actors: Geoff Edholm, David Schachter, Damon Hairston, Joyce Korn
Director: Arthur J. Bressan Jr.
Number of Discs: 1
Duration: 79 minutes
Audio Languages: English
Subtitle Languages: English

For a stretch of time in the 1980s and ’90s, the wordbuddymeant, in modern gay life, someone who had agreed to be a friend to a man dying of AIDS. A buddy visited. Listened to stories. Told stories. Laughed. Cried. And above all, tried to make sure that the frail man in the bed knew that he had not been forgotten. That his passing would be noted. And mourned.

David (David Schachter), a naive graduate student, has volunteered to work as a 'buddy' for people dying of AIDS. Assigned to the intensely political Robert (Geoff Edholm), a lifelong activist whose friends and family have abandoned him following his diagnosis, the two men, each with notably different world views, soon discover common bonds, as David's inner activist awakens and Robert's need for emotional release is fulfilled.

* Newly scanned and restored from 16mm camera negative-
* Original theatrical trailer
* Archival still/news/ production article gallery
* English SDH subtitles

“In the 1985 filmBuddies, writer-director Arthur J. Bressan Jr. did a simple yet radical thing: He told the story of one such friendship and, in the process, made the first feature-length drama about AIDS. Shot on 16mm film in nine days,Buddiesearned respectful reviews and a few festival prizes, but has faded from view over the years. Bressan died of AIDS in July 1987; now, thanks to the efforts of his sister Roe Bressan and film historian Jenni Olson,Buddies has received a 2K digital restoration from Vinegar Syndrome. Thirty-three years after its initial release, the film remains as affecting as ever.” - Village Voice