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Beyond the Gates
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Directed by Michael Caton-Jones.
Two outsiders witness an onslaught of bloody Rwandan genocide in this fact-based drama from director Michael Caton-Jones (Scandal). In 1994, Joe Connor (Hugh Dancy) is a British schoolteacher who has volunteered to spend a year at the Ecole Technique Officielle, a school in the Rwandan capital of Kigali. Connor's arrival in Rwanda occurs after the nation's Civil War between the Tutsis and the Hutus has dissipated (c. August 1993). Yet despite the official end of this well-publicized struggle, political negotiations between the two groups have reached a stalemate, and the Hutus begin systematic preparation for a mass-genocide of the Tutsi people (who have assumed political power via the establishment of the RPF). Connor has already seen signs of the coming conflict in the abuse meted out to Marie (Clare-Hope Ashitey), a Tutsi student who was one of his star pupils, as well as the bitter hatred expressed by Francois (David Gyasi), a Hutu janitor at the school. As the genocide erupts, with extreme Hutu factions slaughtering Tutsis by the thousands, the Ecole Technique becomes a base of operations for Belgian peacekeeping forces from the United Nations. Most extended visitors from the West (especially America and Europe) flee Rwanda as the fighting broke out, but Connor decides to stay, and in fact strikes up a friendship with Father Christopher (John Hurt), a Catholic priest who has come to the nation as a missionary. As Father Christopher serves mass and strives to offer solace to the Tutsis and moderate Hutus caught in the fighting, he and Connor use the school as a safe haven for Tutsi refugees; however, after five days of genocidal killing, the U.N. troops move out, leaving little hope for the people they were supposed to protect. Beyond the Gates was produced by David Belton, who helped write the film's story; Belton was a correspondent with the BBC who was assigned to Rwanda when the fighting broke out. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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MovieBabeMovieBabe Beyond the Gates - Two Weeks
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
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"By Tricia Olszewski You can’t have a film about political unrest without a character who wants to Make a Difference. In Beyond the Gates that character is Joe, a young British secondary-school teacher whose privileged upbringing instilled in him a desire to give back. So, in 1994, he heads to Rwanda, where he witnesses the start of the situation that the U.N. debated semantics about and then largely ignored: the genocide of 800,000 Africans during a 100-day civil war. “You don’t believe that shit?” Joe asks a Tutsi student who explains to him that the attacking Hutus hate her people. Later, when BBC cameras come around, he tells her, “If they’re filming us, then no one can touch us!” The Joes of the world are idealistic, incredibly naive, and annoying as hell. Actually, that last trait is probably unique to this movie. This Joe is played by Hugh Dancy, a chiseled, nonthreatening hunk with big blue eyes and soft brown curls. His Abercrombi ... " [More]
 



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