Underdogs: 'Hotel Rwanda' & 'Million Dollar Baby'.In the summer of 1982, as a recent college graduate hitchhiking Hitchhiking (also known as lifting, thumbing, hitching, autostop or thumbing up a ride) is a means of transportation that is gained by asking people (usually strangers) for a ride in their automobile to travel a distance that may either be a short or long distance. through central Africa, I spent two weeks in Rwanda, a gorgeous country of a thousand hills, all crowded with terraced farms and houses and huts. The capital, Kigali, was a small city, little more than embassies, a few banks and hotels, the Maison du President, and a big military encampment. This was the first African country I'd seen where women served in the gendarmerie--like the lovely, tall twenty-five-year-old I met one night at a popular four-star hotel, the Milles Collines. She was named Jeanne, and we sat outside at the bar by the swimming pool and had a drink; we danced and flirted a little. Jeanne wore a soldier's uniform decorated with a lapel-button picture of the president, General Juvenal Habyarimana. I'd read about the colonial history of Rwanda This article discusses the history of Rwanda. Early history
"That belongs to the past," she said, somewhat guardedly. "There is no longer any problem." Pas de probleme. Today I shudder to remember Jeanne, and to imagine what might have befallen her twelve years later, in the holocaust in which nearly one million of her fellow Tutsis were massacred. Back in 1982 it was impossible, amid the confident, stylish ambience of the hotel, with its easy-seeming mix of European tourists and African elites (and of Tutsis and Hutus), to imagine such terrors. Nor could I know that somewhere in the crowd that night was a Hutu man named Paul Rusesabagina Paul Rusesabagina (born June 15 1954) is a Rwandan who has been internationally honored for saving over 1,000 civilians during the Rwandan Genocide. He was the assistant manager of the Hôtel des Diplomates, before he became the manager of the Hôtel des Mille Collines, both in , who as manager of the Milles Collines in 1994 would emerge as an unlikely hero, saving a thousand desperate Tutsis who'd sought refuge there from the ethnic slaughter--a story of personal heroism now chronicled in Terry George's deeply moving film, Hotel Rwanda. Hotel Rwanda takes the form of a disaster movie. The opening sequences follow the impeccably attired and mild-mannered Rusesabagina through a daily routine strewn strew tr.v. strewed, strewn or strewed, strew·ing, strews 1. To spread here and there; scatter: strewing flowers down the aisle. 2. with ominous portents. At home, a Tutsi neighbor is harassed and beaten by gendarmes. At the import company where Rusesabagina buys black-market whisky and cigars for the Milles Collines guests, a shipping crate breaks open, revealing a secret cargo of machetes. In his hotel van, he winces in dismay at the violent demagogery of Hutu Power Radio, inveighing against Tutsi "spies" and "cockroaches cockroaches insects which may carry Salmonella spp. in their gut and play a part in the spread of the disease. ." Soon the Hutu president, Habyarimana, dies in a mysterious plane crash (which the hate-mongering radio blames on a Tutsi plot) and the nightmare begins--a perfect storm of human, historical, and political energies unleashed upon a helpless minority. Director George and his co-screen-writer, Keir Pearson, keep the political details to a bare minimum. Blame points toward the UN and the Americans; as the frenzy of killing continues, we hear a State Department spokesman quibbling cynically over whether "genocide" is occurring in Rwanda, or merely "acts of genocide"--a Clintonesque linguistic evasion that history will treat far more harshly than the question of what is is. The focus remains on the dire human situation inside the hotel and on the heroism of Rusesabagina, whose own wife, Tatiana (played by British-Nigerian actress Sophie Okonedo), is a Tutsi. The superb American actor Don Cheadle captures Rusesabagina's look of intelligent, suppressed worry gradually verging into dread, and his desperate attempt to remain optimistic despite the deepening chaos. In his repeated reassurances to his wife and children we hear echoes of German Jews in the 1930s: It can't happen here. The film explores a fine line between faith and denial. Rusesabagina worships the white man, the Europeans, whose personal mannerisms he affects--perpetually buttoning or unbuttoning his suit coat, a tiny point of style he practices to suave perfection. The imitation is based not on vanity, we understand, but on deep admiration, a belief that the Europeans represent the best civilization has to offer, not only in manners but in morals, including mercy. In this Rusesabagina proves badly deluded, and when the unit of Belgian soldiers that finally materializes declares its intention to save only the tourists and journalists in the hotel--the Europeans, that is--he must face the bitter recognition that his gods have deserted him. "I am a fool!" he cries in anguish. Cheadle's Rusesabagina is anything but an imposing man, slight of build and almost timid in manner. Yet once he realizes that no one else will intervene to save the day, he proves endlessly resourceful: plying corrupt military officers with liquor and bribing them with jewelry; inventing threats of retaliation from America and Europe; calling well-placed friends in the Rwandan government to beg their help. He does whatever he can, strategizing on the fly. He emphasizes to his terrified ter·ri·fy tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies 1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten. 2. To menace or threaten; intimidate. staff the importance of maintaining appearances: "This cannot be a refugee camp. The Interahamwe [the murderous Hutu militia leading the blood-letting] believe this is a four-star Sabena hotel. That is the only thing that is keeping us alive." As a trainee, Rusesabagina absorbed a mantra from his Belgian superiors: "Maintain the Milles Collines dignity at all times." Under unimaginable pressures, he gives the slogan a profoundly ironic meaning. Hotel Rwanda is not reluctant to pull on the heartstrings, repeatedly announcing its protagonist's goodness ("You are an oasis in the desert," his wife tells him; "You are a good man"), until it's a relief to recall, from an interview, that the real-life Rusesabagina (who survived and lives in Belgium) is known to enjoy a drink or two. Yet the film, full of agonizing scenes where life and death hang in the balance, conveys both a powerful sense of deliverance and a tantalizing tan·ta·lize tr.v. tan·ta·lized, tan·ta·liz·ing, tan·ta·liz·es To excite (another) by exposing something desirable while keeping it out of reach. portrayal of heroism, reminding us that courage is a mystery, a deep wellspring well·spring n. 1. The source of a stream or spring. 2. A source: a wellspring of ideas. wellspring Noun that arises where no one expects it, least of all the hero himself. It's fascinating, watching Clint Eastwood's Million Dollar Baby, to see the seventy-four-year-old actor working side by side with Morgan Freeman, both playing crotchety crotch·et·y adj. Capriciously stubborn or eccentric; perverse. crotch et·i·ness n. old men who run the shabby L.A. boxing gym where a spunky spunk·y adj. spunk·i·er, spunk·i·est Informal Spirited; plucky. spunk i·ly adv. young woman with a trailer-trash back-ground (Hilary Swank) shows up and begs them to train her. Freeman is the consummate natural actor who endows every role with effortless conviction; he could flack for cell phones, wine, whatever, and have you laughing or crying. Eastwood, on the other hand, has made a career of not exactly acting. His range is small, and there are a lot of things he does poorly (for example, when he smiles broadly to express hilarity or joy, as in The Bridges of Madison County, he looks insane). He never dissolves into the role--can you imagine him doing an accent?--in the flexible, naturalistic way of a Don Cheadle. You are never not aware that this is Eastwood acting. But this iconic star quality is getting an interesting twist in the final phase of his career. Million Dollar Baby continues a line of films, traceable back to Unforgiven, in which Eastwood has altered his take on violence, representing it as tragic rather than cathartic cathartic (kəthär`tĭk): see laxative. , and in the process undoing the stoicism Stoicism (stō`ĭsĭzəm), school of philosophy founded by Zeno of Citium (in Cyprus) c.300 B.C. The first Stoics were so called because they met in the Stoa Poecile [Gr. of his mythic character. At one juncture in this movie, his character, Frankie Dunn, confesses his spiritual bewilderment to a priest, and breaks down, weeping. As screen tears go, his aren't effusive ef·fu·sive adj. 1. Unrestrained or excessive in emotional expression; gushy: an effusive manner. 2. Profuse; overflowing: effusive praise. . Then again, the first time you saw your father cry, it might have been just a quick swipe at a teary eye, but you probably buckled inwardly. The thrill of watching Eastwood revamp his mythic meanings goes far beyond good acting. Eastwood's signature tics and gestures remain, but their meaning has been transformed. Take, for instance, his trademark squint squint: see strabismus. , one eye wincing slightly to indicate incipient outrage. That squint used to mean Dirty Harry Callahan was about to blow someone away. No more. In Million Dollar Baby, when Eastwood's star prizefighter informs him he's leaving him for a more ambitious trainer, we see the squint ... but no retaliation follows. Nowadays Eastwood's characters absorb more than they dish out. His menacing whisper has also taken on new meaning. Old age has taken that seething seethe intr.v. seethed, seeth·ing, seethes 1. To churn and foam as if boiling. 2. a. To be in a state of turmoil or ferment: , nearly obscene insinuation INSINUATION, civil law. The transcription of an act on the public registers, like our recording of deeds. It was not necessary in any other alienation, but that appropriated to the purpose of donation. Inst. 2, 7, 2; Poth. Traite des Donations, entre vifs, sect. 2, art. 3, Sec. , the voice of fury barely held in check--"Do you feel lucky, punk?"--and turned it hoarse and laryngeal laryngeal /lar·yn·ge·al/ (lah-rin´je-al) pertaining to the larynx. la·ryn·geal or la·ryn·gal adj. Of, relating to, affecting, or near the larynx. . Eastwood sounds frail. As a director, Eastwood likes to keep things moving, and rarely surprises you. Million Dollar Baby offers a familiar fight-film chiaroscuro chiaroscuro (kyärōsk `rō) [Ital.,=light and dark], term once applied to an early method of printing woodcuts from several blocks and also to works in black and white or monotone. of shadows and alleys, ratty rat·ty adj. rat·ti·er, rat·ti·est 1. Of or characteristic of rats. 2. Infested with rats. 3. Dilapidated; shabby. gyms, and a lone boxer working the speed bag late into the night. A certain sentimentality lurks, like Swank's Maggie, practicing her boxing footwork while waitressing at the diner, or Frankie, continuing to write hundreds of letters to his estranged es·trange tr.v. es·tranged, es·trang·ing, es·trang·es 1. To make hostile, unsympathetic, or indifferent; alienate. 2. To remove from an accustomed place or set of associations. daughter, all of them Returned to Sender. Really, hundreds? And does he really sit around the gym reading Yeats? Thrilling as it is to hear Clint Eastwood recite "Lake Isle of Innisfree The Lake Isle of Innisfree is a poem written by William Butler Yeats. It was contained in a collection of his poetry titled The Rose published in 1893. I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,," you don't believe it for a second. And tired lines (like "I'll never quit boxing. I like the stink too much, I guess") suggest a director not overly concerned with being original. That said, the second half of the movie takes a big surprise turn. I won't give it away, except to say that it engages an issue dear to Commonweal com·mon·weal n. 1. The public good or welfare. 2. Archaic A commonwealth or republic. Noun 1. readers, and resolves it in a way many will find troubling. Well, maybe you shouldn't blame a fight film for picking an argument. I'm not, anyway. In a year without obvious Oscar heavyweights, Million Dollar Baby is emerging as a favorite, and we could do worse. Lesser contenders have walked away with the prize. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

et·i·ness n.
`rō)
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion