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By Peter T. Chattaway
AT LEAST one new movie about the Rwandan
genocide has been produced each year for the past four years, ever
since Terry George directed Don Cheadle and Sophie Okonedo to their richly
deserved Oscar nominations for Hotel Rwanda -- and to the
casual viewer, it might seem like all these films are beginning to blur
together.
All of these films -- including Shooting Dogs (released
in the United States as Beyond
the Gates), A Sunday in Kigali and the newest film,
Shake Hands with the Devil -- have depicted the shock and horror
felt by whites and blacks alike when Hutu extremists began killing Tutsis
by the tens of thousands in April 1994.
And most of these films have shown how the people who committed these
atrocities guessed correctly that the United Nations would offer no
serious intervention, despite having a team on the ground. As more than
one film has pointed out, if the United States pulled out of Somalia the
year before after suffering only 18 casualties, why would they or anyone
else risk their troops for some obscure corner of Africa?
These points and others have been made in several films already, but
Shake Hands with the Devil comes at them from a perspective we
haven't quite seen before, because it is based on the award-winning memoir
by Lt. Gen. Roméo
Dallaire, the Canadian officer who led the UN's peacekeepers during
the genocide.
Other films have referred to the death of the Rwandan president in an
airplane crash -- the incident that sparked the genocide -- and other
films have referred to the 10 Belgian soldiers who were tortured and
murdered by Hutu extremists, and whose deaths prompted the Western nations
to pull their people out of Rwanda.
Shake Hands with the Devil, on the other hand, puts those
characters on-screen, and makes their deaths matter just that little bit
more. Dallaire (played by Roy Dupuis), as leader of the UN peacekeepers,
knows and meets with all the key political and military figures in Rwanda,
including the president, before the genocide starts. And as the general
responsible for the troops, it is his sad duty to count the bodies of his
men -- after they have been piled up, rather heartlessly, behind a morgue.
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The new film also places arguably greater emphasis on the frustration felt
by Dallaire and his comrades. While some of the other films have focused
on real or fictitious civilians who strive heroically to save lives any
way they can, the new film concerns a military officer who is bound by the
rules of engagement that are faxed to him from another continent. He has
no freedom to improvise, to think outside the box.
The film -- written by Michael Donovan, who co-produced Bowling for
Columbine -- shows how Dallaire was prepared to launch raids against
Hutu extremists before the genocide had even begun, and how he demanded
that the United Nations send in reinforcements after it started. Every
time, though, he is thwarted by politicians and bureaucrats who barely
give him and his men the means to defend themselves.
Surprisingly, the film makes only the briefest of nods to religious
themes. One scene depicts the bodies of those who were killed inside a
church, and Dallaire recalls in another scene how he was brought up to
believe that "despair is the sin that cannot be forgiven." As he descends
into a suicidal depression, he remarks, "When you're guilty, you can do
penance, atone for your sins. But when you fail, it's done."
Earlier versions of this story have been more explicit about the religious
aspects of the Rwandan massacre, for better and for worse. On the cover of
his book, Dallaire boldly states that he has met the Devil, and therefore,
he knows there is a God; while a 2004 documentary based on the book
criticized Rwandan churches for not doing more to prevent the genocide.
(Dallaire himself notes in the book that some of the killers were
celebrating Easter only a few days before the killing began.)
The film, directed in competent but unremarkable fashion by Roger
Spottiswoode, is told in flashbacks, as Dallaire sits in a psychiatrist's
office and is haunted by faces from his past -- some of which try to
reassure him that he did what he could. But the ultimate focus is not on
Dallaire the man, as much as it is on the impossible situation in which he
found himself. Shake Hands with the Devil may or may not last long
at the multiplex, but it will probably live on in history classes for
years to come.
Internet Movie Database | Movie
Review Query Engine USA: Not
rated | BC:
14A | ON: 14A
September 27/2007
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