Hotel Rwanda is a 2004 theatrical film directed by Terry George . It is a Canada/United Kingdom/Italy/South Africa co-production, and the first-ever co-production between the rival independent film studios Lions Gate Films and United Artists.
Plot
Based on a true event, the movie is about Paul Rusesabagina (Cheadle), a Hutu who managed the four-star Sabena-owned Hotel des Mille Collines in Kigali, Rwanda. When the 1994 Rwandan genocide broke out, he thought of only saving his immediate family but as he saw what was happening he opened the hotel to Tutsis and Hutu refugees. He used all the favours he had built up as manager of the hotel and saved the lives of 1,268 refugees, in a fashion similar to Oskar Schindler as portrayed in Schindler's List. The movie ends with Rusesabagina's family and the hotel evacuees crossing the Tutsi rebel line to a refugee camp and from there to Tanzania. Rusesabagina takes orphan children with him on an already full bus. The text suggests some of the generals were punished for their crimes. A happy ending is unusual for a story set against the backdrop of genocide leaving some crtics of the film worried that the auspicious heroism of the story fails to impress the horror of the event.
Main cast
Awards
Trivia
- There are complaints of the film not giving the Canadian Lt-Gen. Roméo Dallaire, the Force Commander of UNAMIR, the ill-fated United Nations peacekeeping force in Rwanda during the massacre, his due as a hero who tried to stop the atrocity. Instead, he is depicted in a fictionalized form, although in a positive light, as Col. Oliver, played by Nick Nolte.
External links
Last updated: 06-02-2005 04:01:16