“I think 10 years from now, hopefully the furor over him as a controversial figure will die down. Kantor suspects only time will tell where history will judge a man who dedicated his life to public service. The film ends with Fauci’s retirement from the NIAID late last year. “I hope that people on the other side, even if they never end up agreeing with him, will at least see somebody who is a real person, who’s a thinking person, who’s somebody maybe they can even relate to.” “I hope it’s not viewed as a partisan message, but as a portrait of who he is and what he went through,” said the director. Mannucci relied on 10 long sit-downs with Fauci to develop trust with his subject and didn’t clutter the documentary with testimonials from talking heads, wanting to focus on Fauci’s experiences. “Maybe I should have done that,” he says. In one remarkable sequence in the documentary, Mannucci presses Fauci on whether he might have handled things differently looking back - like asking Americans to adopt masks sooner or ordering quarantines faster. “There’s one sign that says, ‘Fauci, You’re Killing Us’ and the other sign that says ‘Fauci, You’re Killing Us’ but the rationale for those from the 1980s to 2023 is enormously different,” Fauci said. That’s not the case when protesters in recent years began attacking Fauci for mask mandates, school closures, quarantines and bizarre claims about the COVID-19 vaccines. It made me feel if I were in their shoes, I’d be doing exactly what they were doing.” “And what they were saying was making perfect sense. ![]() “I put aside the confrontational behavior and the attacks on me and listen to what they were saying,” Fauci explained in the interview. They have long since reconciled they were all on the same side, after all - science. Mannucci’s camera flashes-forward to today, with Fauci cordially meeting up with the former AIDS activists who once decried him. “I went from a world of success and gratification to a world of frustration and failure,” he says in the film. The film shows that Fauci learned a lesson in humility with AIDS, as the disease stubbornly persisted and activists argued not enough was being done from the government. “When you talk about all of the different things coming together for a disaster, that’s what happened: A divided country, a president who amplified the division and then a public health crisis - you couldn’t ask for a worse combination of things,” he said.ĬOVID-19 may have introduced Fauci to millions of Americans, but his long career at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases was marked by numerous previous health scares, among them HIV, SARS, MERS, Ebola and even the nation’s 2001 anthrax attacks. ![]() ![]() The documentary covers his career and its crises, especially the way COVID-19 was handled by the Trump administration. The documentary airs Tuesday and later streams.įauci allowed a film crew to follow him for 23 months starting in January 2021. “I just felt that there needed to be a story of people understanding what public health officials go through, but also I hope as a source of inspiration for young people who are either in science or interested in going into science,” he told The Associated Press. Fauci hopes it can inspire more public servants like him. Tony Fauci,” offers a portrait of an unlikely lightning rod: A government infectious disease scientist who advised seven presidents. ![]() It says something about Fauci that it’s not initially clear when that sign was waved in anger - in the 1980s as AIDS made its deadly rise or in the 2020s with COVID-19 vaccine opponents.
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