Hotel Rwanda
Hotel Rwanda is a 2004 drama film directed by Terry George. It was adapted from a screenplay co-written by George and Keir Pearson, and stars Don Cheadle and Sophie Okonedo as hotelier Paul Rusesabagina and his wife Tatiana. Based on the Rwandan genocide, which occurred during the spring of 1994, the film documents Rusesabagina's efforts to save the lives of his family and more than a thousand other refugees by providing them with shelter in the besieged Hôtel des Mille Collines. Hotel Rwanda explores genocide, political corruption, and the repercussions of violence.
The film was a co-production between United Artists and Lions Gate Films, and was commercially distributed by United Artists theatrically and by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer for home media. Hotel Rwanda premiered in theatres in limited release in the United States on 22 December 2004 and in wide release on 4 February 2005, grossing more than $23 million in domestic ticket sales. It earned an additional $10 million in business through international release to top out at a combined total of nearly $34 million in gross revenue.
The film was nominated for multiple awards, including Academy Award nominations for Best Actor, Best Supporting Actress, and Best Original Screenplay.
Plot
In April 1994, tensions between the Hutu and Tutsi peoples lead to genocide in Rwanda, where corruption and bribes between politicians are routine. Paul Rusesabagina, manager of the Hôtel des Mille Collines, is Hutu, but his wife Tatiana is Tutsi. Their marriage is a source of friction with Hutu extremists, including Georges Rutaganda, a goods supplier to the hotel who is also the local leader of Interahamwe, a brutal Hutu militia.As the political situation in the country worsens following the assassination of the president, Paul and his family observe neighbors being killed, initiating the early stages of the genocide. Paul curries favor with people of influence, bribing them with money and alcohol, seeking to maintain sufficient influence to keep his family safe. When civil war erupts and a Rwandan Army officer threatens Paul and his neighbors, Paul barely negotiates their safety and brings them to the hotel. Upon returning with them, he finds his receptionist Gregoire occupying the Presidential suite threatening to rat them out if he is put back to work.
More evacuees arrive at the hotel from the overburdened UN refugee camp, the Red Cross, and various orphanages, among which Tatiana desperately searches for her brother, sister-in-law, and two nieces. As the situation becomes more violent, Paul must divert the Hutu soldiers, care for the refugees, protect his family, and maintain the appearance of a functioning hotel. He eventually gains the protection of the Rwandan army general Augustin Bizimungu, who threatens Gregoire back to work.
Low on supplies, Paul and Gregoire drive to collect hotel supplies from Georges Rutaganda and witnesses Tutsi hostages being treated violently by the Hutu militia. Georges explains to Paul that the "rich cockroaches'" money is going to be valueless because all of the Tutsis will be dead. Paul expresses disbelief that the Hutu extremists will wipe out all of the Tutsis, but Georges replies: "Why not? We are halfway there already."
They return to the hotel through the dark and thick fog, on a road that Georges recommends. At one point, Paul believes they have gone off the road and tells Gregoire to stop. When Paul exits the vehicle, he sees the riverside road is full of bodies and realizes that Georges was correct in his estimation that half the Tutsis are already dead.
The UN peacekeeping forces, led by Canadian Colonel Oliver, are unable to take assertive action against the Interahamwe because the peacekeepers are forbidden to intervene in the conflict and prevent the genocide. The foreign nationals are evacuated, but the Rwandans are left behind. When the UN forces attempt to evacuate a group of refugees, including Paul's family, Gregoire betrays them by informing the Interahamwe of the evacuation, and they are ambushed and forced to turn back.
In a last-ditch effort to save the refugees, Paul pleads with General Bizimungu for assistance. However, when Paul's bribes no longer work, he blackmails the general with threats of him being tried as a war criminal if he doesn't help. Soon afterward, Paul's family and the hotel refugees are finally able to leave the besieged hotel in a UN convoy. They travel through retreating masses of refugees and militia to reach safety behind Tutsi rebel lines and are reunited with their nieces.
The end title cards explain that Paul saved at least 1,200 Tutsi and Hutu refugees. He and his family, who adopted the two nieces, moved to Belgium, but Tatiana's brother Thomas and his wife were never found. The genocide came to an end in July 1994 when the Tutsi rebels drove the Hutu militia and the Interahamwe across the border into the Congo. At least one million people died in the genocide.
Cast
- Don Cheadle as Paul Rusesabagina
- Sophie Okonedo as Tatiana Rusesabagina
- Nick Nolte as Colonel Oliver, loosely based on General Roméo Dallaire
- Joaquin Phoenix as Jack Daglish
- Fana Mokoena as General Augustin Bizimungu
- Cara Seymour as Pat Archer
- David O'Hara as Dave Flemming
- Tony Kgoroge as Gregoire
- Desmond Dube as Dube
- Hakeem Kae-Kazim as Georges Rutaganda
- Leleti Khumalo as Fedens
- Antonio Lyons as Thomas Mirama
- Mosa Kaiser as Elys Rusesabagina
- Mduduzi Mabaso as a Hutu lieutenant
- Jean Reno as Mr. Tillens
- Eugene Wanangwa Khumbanyiwa as Hotel Staff
Production
On 6 April 1994, a plane carrying President Juvénal Habyarimana, a Hutu, was shot down. Following that incident, the genocide began. Hutu extremists belonging to the Interahamwe militia launched plans to destroy the entire Tutsi civilian population. Tutsi and people suspected of being Tutsi were killed in their homes and as they tried to flee the country. It is estimated that some 200,000 people participated in the perpetration of the Rwandan genocide. Hotelier Paul Rusesabagina of the Belgian owned luxury Hôtel des Mille Collines, used his power and influence to personally save both Tutsi and Hutu refugees. Rusesabagina regularly bribed Rwandan Hutu soldiers and kept militias outside the hotel's property during the hundred days of killing. Following the carnage, Rusesabagina survived along with his wife, four children, two adopted nieces; as well as most of the refugees he sheltered.
Sharing his thoughts about the lack of international intervention during the crisis, director George commented, "It's simple,... African lives are not seen as valuable as the lives of Europeans or Americans." Attempting to share the horrors of the genocide, George sought to tell the story of Rusesabagina, portrayed as a humanitarian during the relentless acts of violence. However, Rusesabagina has since come under criticism from allegations that he extorted money from hotel guests for rooms and food. It was also reported that the UN headquarters in Kigali received information that Rusesabagina had provided a Rwandan army commander with a list of hotel guests and their room numbers. UN observers managed to change the room numbers of those most threatened. The character of the Canadian Lieutenant-General is based on Senator Roméo Dallaire, now retired from the Canadian Armed Forces. He recounted his own experiences in his biography, Shake Hands with the Devil. The book was later adapted into two feature films; a, and a 2007 dramatic motion picture.
George stated that it was important to craft the film for a mass-market audience, using the question of whether the film is "going to play in Peoria? Will it be understood? Is it main stream enough?"
Filming
Principal filming was shot on location in Kigali, Rwanda, and Johannesburg, South Africa. Paul Rusesabagina was consulted during the writing of the film. Although the character of Colonel Oliver played by Nolte is fictional in nature, the role was inspired by the UN force commander for UNAMIR, Roméo Dallaire. Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni, then-Rwandan president Juvénal Habyarimana, and Rwandan Patriotic Front leader Paul Kagame appear in archive television footage in the film.The producers of the film partnered with the United Nations Foundation to create the International Fund for Rwanda, which supported United Nations Development Programme initiatives assisting Rwandan survivors. "The goal of the film is not only to engage audiences in this story of genocide but also to inspire them to help redress the terrible devastation," said George.
Soundtrack
The original motion picture soundtrack for Hotel Rwanda was released by the Commotion label on 11 January 2005. It features songs written by Wyclef Jean and Deborah Cox, among others. The music for the film was composed by Rupert Gregson-Williams, Andrea Guerra, and the Afro Celt Sound System, while being edited by Michael Connell.Marketing
Novel
Hotelier Paul Rusesabagina's real life experience encouraged director George to produce the film. A paperback novel published by Newmarket Press, entitled Hotel Rwanda: Bringing the True Story of an African Hero to Film, released on 7 February 2005, dramatizes the events of the Rwandan Genocide in 1994, as depicted in the film, and expands on the ideas of how Rusesabagina sheltered and saved more than 1,200 people in the hotel he managed in Kigali by summarizing three years of research, articles that chronicle the historical events, and the ensuing aftermath. A brief history and timeline, the making of the film, and the complete screenplay written by Keir Pearson and Terry George are covered in thorough detail.Release
Home media
Following its cinematic release in theatres, the film was released in VHS video format on 12 April 2005, marking the final United Artists film released on the format. The Region 1 Code widescreen edition of the film was also released on DVD in the United States on 12 April 2005. Special features for the DVD include; "A Message for Peace: Making Hotel Rwanda" documentary, "Return to Rwanda" documentary, Selected scenes commentary by Don Cheadle, Audio commentary by director Terry George and real-life subject of the film–Paul Rusesabagina, along with select commentary by musician Wyclef Jean. Supplementally, the Blu-ray Disc edition of the film, featuring special documentaries along with selected scenes and audio commentary, was released in the United States on 10 May 2011. The film is available in other media formats such as Video on demand as well.Reception
Critical response
Among mainstream critics in the U.S., the film received universally positive reviews. Rotten Tomatoes reported that 91% of 194 sampled critics gave the film a positive review, with an average score of 7.95/10 and the consensus calling it a "sobering and heartfelt tale about massacre that took place in Rwanda while most of the world looked away." At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average out of 100 to critics' reviews, the film received a score of 79 based on 40 reviews.Michael Rechtshaffen, writing in The Hollywood Reporter, said actor "Cheadle impressively carries the entire picture, delivering the kind of note-perfect performance that's absolutely deserving of Oscar consideration." Roger Ebert in the Chicago Sun-Times called it a "riveting drama", while exclaiming "The film works not because the screen is filled with meaningless special effects, formless action and vast digital armies, but because Cheadle, Nolte and the filmmakers are interested in how two men choose to function in an impossible situation. Because we sympathize with these men, we are moved by the film." In the San Francisco Chronicle, Mick LaSalle wrote that the film was a "harrowing experience", and that "it documents for a mass audience what it was like. It's useful, in that it shows how it can happen. It's even hopeful, in that it shows that it's possible—not guaranteed, but possible—for people to maintain their humanity in the face of unhinged barbarism." Claudia Puig of USA Today, said the film was "one of the year's most moving and powerful films, anchored by a magnificent performance by Don Cheadle." She declared, "Hotel Rwanda emerges as an African version of Schindler's List." The film however, was not without its detractors. Dave Sterrit of The Christian Science Monitor, felt that although the subject matter was crucially important, he commented that "the movie dilutes its impact with by-the-numbers filmmaking, and Cheadle's one-note performance displays few of his acting gifts." Left equally unimpressed was Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly. Commenting on the character significance of the U.N. personnel, she said it was "a bad day for narrative, if not for diplomacy, when there is only one 3-D character among the entire U.N. lot, clad in their blue helmets, and that role is rasped by Nick Nolte with moral remorse rather than his more usual hint of dissolution." In her overall summation, she wrote "Hotel Rwanda is a strange history lesson that leaves us more overlectured than properly overwhelmed." Michael Atkinson of The Village Voice, added to the negativity by saying the film was "told to us secondhand, or glimpsed in distant scuffles" and "Like the majority of movies about the last century of holocausts, Hotel Rwanda is as earnest and tasteful as its creators. To capture the white-hot terror of social calamity, someone a little more lawless and fierce might be called for."
Writing for The New York Times, Stephen Holden said the film was "a political thriller based on fact that hammers every button on the emotional console." He commended how the film "offers a devastating picture of media-driven mass murder left unchecked" while also praising "Mr. Cheadle's magnificent, understated portrayal". James Berardinelli writing for ReelViews, called the film "powerful" and noted that it didn't "pull as many punches as its detractors would have us believe." Berardinelli also said the film was "brutal and shocking when it needs to be, but it also has great emotional scope and power. We find ourselves enmeshed in Paul's struggle, sharing his despair at the warfare tearing apart his country, his frustration and anger at the U.N.'s inability to act, and, eventually, his hope for a better tomorrow." Describing some pitfalls, Jeff Vice of the Deseret News said the "decision by the filmmakers to show things from that limited viewpoint—to show how isolated and fearful the characters were of the chaos going on around them—the film feels a little dishonest and diminished. It's never quite as effective as "The Killing Fields" or "Schindler's List" in that the film's overall impact is not as great and it doesn't linger in the memory." Vice however was quick to admit "Hotel Rwanda does have its share of powerful moments; in particular, a scene in which Paul and another hotel employee unknowingly—due to fog—drive into a mass grave." He also expressed satisfaction with the acting saying, "Cheadle brings a needed intensity to the film; his character's fear and compassion are quite vivid. Nolte is also good in his limited screen time, as is Joaquin Phoenix, who plays a news cameraman."
Eleanor R. Gillespie of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, stated that Hotel Rwanda was an "unforgettable film" as well as being "a doubly unforgettable performance by Don Cheadle." Although mentioning "The parallels with Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List are obvious", she praised individual cinematic elements that made the film unique, such as "the revelation of a dark, bumpy road paved with thousands of corpses. Or in a little girl's heartwrenching plea, 'Please don't let them kill me. I promise I won't be Tutsi anymore'." She concluded her review with Cheadle's noteworthy performance, saying he gave "one of the best performances of last year—an Oscar-worthy portrait of a man who kept his head clear and his humanity intact in the midst of a man-made hell." Similarly, David Ansen wrote in Newsweek that "two performances carry the film. Cheadle, in his richest role since "Devil in a Blue Dress", burrows deep inside this complex man, who discovers in himself a strength he never knew he possessed, as he faces the disillusionment of all the "civilized" notions he believes in. As his strong, committed wife, Tatiana, Sophie Okonedo, barely resembling the saucy hooker she played in "Dirty Pretty Things", is a revelation." However, in the Arizona Daily Star, Phil Villarreal was not moved by the lead acting of Cheadle or Nolte. He thought the characters were "cardboardish" and went further saying the "uplifting moments of rescue seem antiseptic and set up." Critic Leonard Maltin though, wrote that Hotel Rwanda was a "Powerful film" which he thought avoided being "overly didactic by focusing on one compelling character, believably brought to life by Cheadle." In , drawing on the work of journalist Keith Harmon Snow and writer Edward S. Herman, author Matthew Alford called the film "sensitive, humane and powerful" but noted that it was "striking how the history of bloodshed has been spun in line with Western interests".
Top ten lists
Hotel Rwanda was listed on many critics' top ten lists for 2004.- 1st – Richard Roeper, Ebert & Roeper
- 3rd – Claudia Puig, USA Today
- 3rd – Stephanie Zacharek, Salon.com
- 6th – Ruthie Stein, San Francisco Chronicle
- 8th – Lawrence Toppman, Salon.com
- 8th – Mick LaSalle & Carla Meyer, San Francisco Chronicle
- 9th – Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times
- 10th – Desson Thomson, Washington Post
- 10th – Lawrence Toppman, Charlotte Observer
- Top 10 – Carrie Rickey, Philadelphia Inquirer
- Top 10 – Carina Chocano, Los Angeles Times
Accolades
Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
77th Academy Awards | Best Actor | Don Cheadle | |
77th Academy Awards | Best Supporting Actress | Sophie Okonedo | |
77th Academy Awards | Best Original Screenplay | Keir Pearson, Terry George | |
American Film Institute Awards 2004 | Top Audience Award | ———— | |
Discover Screenwriting Award 2004 | Discover Screenwriting Award | Keir Pearson, Terry George | |
2005 Berlin International Film Festival | Out of Competition | ———— | |
2005 Bet Awards | Best Actor | Don Cheadle | |
Black Reel Awards of 2005 | Best Actor in a Drama | Don Cheadle | |
Black Reel Awards of 2005 | Best Actress in a Drama | Sophie Okonedo | |
59th British Academy Film Awards | Best Original Screenplay | Keir Pearson, Terry George | |
Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards 2004 | Best Picture | ———— | |
Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards 2004 | Best Actor | Don Cheadle | |
Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards 2005 | Best Actor | Don Cheadle | |
Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards 2005 | Best Picture | ———— | |
2005 David Di Donatello Awards | Best Foreign Film | ———— | |
2005 18th European Film Awards | Best Composer | Rupert Gregson-Williams, Andrea Guerra | |
62nd Golden Globe Awards | Best Picture – Drama | ———— | |
62nd Golden Globe Awards | Best Actor – Drama | Don Cheadle | |
62nd Golden Globe Awards | Best Original Song | Jerry Duplessis, Andrea Guerra, Wyclef Jean | |
Golden Satellite Awards 2004 | Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama | Don Cheadle | |
Golden Satellite Awards 2004 | Best Motion Picture Drama | ———— | |
Golden Satellite Awards 2004 | Best Original Song | Jerry Duplessis, Andrea Guerra, Wyclef Jean | |
Golden Satellite Awards 2004 | Best Original Screenplay | Keir Pearson, Terry George | |
2006 Grammy Awards | Best Song Written For Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media | Jerry Duplessis, Andrea Guerra, Wyclef Jean | |
2005 Humanitas Prize | Humanitas Prize | Keir Pearson, Terry George | |
2005 3rd Irish Film & Television Awards | Best Director | Terry George | |
2005 3rd Irish Film & Television Awards | Best Script for Film | Keir Pearson, Terry George | |
31st Japan Academy Prize Ceremony | Best Foreign Language Film | ———— | |
London Film Critics Circle Awards 2005 | Best British Director | Terry George | |
London Film Critics Circle Awards 2005 | Best Actor | Don Cheadle | |
London Film Critics Circle Awards 2005 | Best British Supporting Actress | Sophie Okonedo | |
2005 Movieguide Awards | Most Inspiring Movie Acting | Don Cheadle | |
2005 36th NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture | Don Cheadle | |
2005 36th NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Motion Picture | ———— | |
2005 36th NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture | Sophie Okonedo | |
2006 Nastro d'Argento Silver Ribbon Award | Best Score | Andrea Guerra | |
2004 National Board of Review of Motion Pictures Awards | Top Ten Films | ———— | |
Online Film Critics Society Awards 2004 | Best Actor | Don Cheadle | |
2004 Political Film Society Awards | Exposé | ———— | |
2004 Political Film Society Awards | Human Rights | ———— | |
2004 Political Film Society Awards | Peace | ———— | |
Producers Guild of America Awards 2004 | Stanley Kramer Award | ———— | |
2006 Robert Awards | Best Non-American Film | Terry George | |
San Diego Film Critics Society Awards 2004 | Body of Work | Don Cheadle | |
11th Screen Actors Guild Awards | Best Ensemble Acting | ———— | |
11th Screen Actors Guild Awards | Best Actor | Don Cheadle | |
11th Screen Actors Guild Awards | Best Supporting Actress | Sophie Okonedo | |
Southeastern Film Critics Association Awards 2004 | Best Picture | ———— | |
2004 Toronto International Film Festival | People's Choice Award | Terry George | |
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards 2004 | Best Actor | Don Cheadle | |
World Soundtrack Awards 2005 | Best Original Song Written for a Film | Jerry Duplessis, Andrea Guerra, Wyclef Jean | |
Writers Guild of America Awards 2004 | Best Original Screenplay | Keir Pearson, Terry George |