Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - Hotel Rwanda: What do you think of ethnic wars?

Hotel Rwanda: What do you think of ethnic wars?

While watching the protagonist in the film juggle among butchers, warlords, European countries and UN peacekeeping forces, and do his best to save the hotel and the only oasis of life in Blood Spill, I can't help but think of Schindler, who is also kind and selfless, and who also protects the vulnerable groups in crazy times. But the hero is more difficult than Schindler, because

This film effectively distinguishes the tragic turmoil in Rwanda from the world's reaction to it. In the film, Paul said to the refugees, "We must make the world feel ashamed and take due action." Rwanda seems to the outside world to be just a place for profit and tourism. After the riots, European tourists fled Rwanda and abandoned this happy place far away. The audience will therefore ask themselves, if the world's reaction is not so indifferent, will so many innocent lives be buried in the whirlpool of ethnic cleansing?

The film does not deliberately depict the horrible and bloody massacre scene, but depicts Paul's desperate nervousness and the new panic caused by the endless nervousness faced by the passengers staying in Rwanda hotels. The film seems to deliberately downplay the cruelty of real events. From a visual point of view, it seems to weaken the overall penetration and expressiveness, which is also the short board of the film.

10 years after 1994, politicians from all over the world went to Rwanda to express their remorse for the original incident and vowed never to let the tragedy happen again. In Sudan, Congo and other places, this kind of slaughter that regards life as dirt has never stopped. The pain of history continues, and the muddy road to peace on the African continent is still there.