Beyond the Gates
What’s the Story?
Marie (Children of Men's Claire-Hope Ashitey) likes to run. A student at the École Technique Officielle, she first appears in BEYOND THE GATES taking laps around her classmates. Her talent will, sadly, become crucial later in the film, when the 1994 Rwandan genocide robs her of her family, her home, and her youthful sense of hope and security. Michael Caton-Jones' film deals with the Rwandan genocide following the assassination of Hutu president Juvénal Habyarimana. In this film, viewers see the brutality and carnage through the eyes of the white men who were trying to help the Rwandans but have no power to protect the Africans in their care: Marie's teacher Joe (Hugh Dancy), Belgian UN Capitaine Charles Delon (Dominique Horwitz) and Papa Christopher (John Hurt), the priest who presides over the school.
Is It Any Good?
Beyond the Gates is peppered with devastating moments -- Christopher's discovery of slaughtered French nuns, Joe's witnessing of killings by people he once considered "friends," Marie's father's request that the UN soldiers shoot the black Rwandans at the school rather than leave them to be murdered by machetes. Still, one of the movie's most provocative scenes involves BBC reporter Rachel (Nicola Walker), who articulates -- and suffers from -- her own racism. Remembering her empathy for victims of the Bosnian genocide the year before, she confesses, "Over here, they're just dead Africans." She pauses, then adds, "What a thing to say. We're all just selfish pieces of work in the end."
Beyond the Gates doesn't consider intersections between the Hutus' monstrous violence and resentment of European colonialism, imperialism, or capitalism. But it does suggest that Joe's ignorance and sense of privilege -- however honorable his intentions -- make a dangerous combination.

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