Thursday, March 20, 2008

100 Days


100 days is a sad, sad movie about the Rwandan Genocide.  My favorite thing about this movie though is the way it deals with the genocide so subtly.  Easily, 100 days could be a simple cry.  Like paint by numbers, this could be one of those movies where the director shows his audience exactly where he wants them to feel the emotional pull.  But not this movie.  Nick Hughes (the director) instead chose to focus on specific character development.   In fact, the overall toll of the genocide is never specifically mentioned.  Still, the audience is bawling by the end.

The emotional pull of 100 days is entirely due to a cleverly crafted character/audience relationship.  The two main characters, Baptiste (Eric Bridges Twahirwa)  and Josette (Cleophas Kabisita), are young lovers intending to be married.  From the beginning, the scenes with just these two are vibrant and happy.  The first time we see them together they are playing in trees.  The colors on the screen are bright and the camera picks up various shafts of light coming through the trees.  The dialogue is simple but conveys a youthful sense of hope.  Even Josette's dress, which she proudly proclaims is from, "Paris!" is colorful and full of life, just like the young people themselves.  From this scene the audience has a sense of progression, that these two want life to be better for themselves and future generations.  Josette refuses to sleep with Baptiste because she doesn't want to be pregnant and unhappily married, as she says, "like my other friends."  They want to have children when they choose and wear clothing from far away.  These dreams and others like them are so similar to this American audience that we can't help but be swept away with Josette and Baptiste. 
 
There is one beautiful shot in this sequence that deserves special remark.  When they are discussing their future, Josette and Baptiste are sitting on the forest floor on a small hill.  The camera looks up at them, Josette in the foreground on the right and Baptiste far in the background on the top left.  At this point this shot is jarring because it places the lovers physically distant from each other.  Unfortunately this is a camera's way of foreshadowing their future.  

At the end of the movie we see an almost identical shot.  Josette is sitting on the right in the foreground, and Baptiste on the top left corner in the background.  However, Josette's beautiful dress is now discolored, torn and dull.  Baptiste too has dirt and blood on him, and looks to have aged ten years in those short 100 days.  Even without viewing the movie, these two production stills get the point across vividly.

A movie about genocide could easily go overboard on the violence.  Although it is important to recognize that horrific things did happen, the danger is that, somehow, showing too much of this in a film is more likely to desensitize the audience than make the needed point.  This is much like Mel Gibson's Passion of the Christ, which endeavors to make a religious/humanistic point but is overwhelmingly remembered for its excessive violence. A movie about genocide could end up similarly.  Instead, there are relatively few direct discussions of the genocide happening around the characters.  One such scene is a simple yet horrific shot of body after body after body being dumped into a pit.  Some of the bodies aren't even fully in the pit.  The visual trick of seeing a dead body hanging only half over a ledge and some villain walking over the former person with no sense of decorum shows the genius of Hughes.  Without use of dialogue he has effectively captured the evil of the genocide.  

Another scene with very little dialogue but huge portent comes almost exactly in the middle of the film.  Interestingly, the larger part of the violence only takes place in the second half of the movie.  However, the inhumanity can be summed up in a single scene.  The scene begins with three groups of men coming to a crossroads (how symbolic) with a gas station in the middle.  The Tutsi children from the local boys school are called forth by name and put in the gas station.  The gas station is filled with kerosene, but even after the order is given to burn it no one will carry the torch.  Finally a single man takes charge of the fire, and only after this do the others join in.  This scene seems to me significant for two reasons: 1) No one wanted to lead the violence, only follow it.  They have no real reason to cause the disturbance, but follow almost gleefully when another leads.  2) The schoolchildren don't scream.  Even when the kerosene seeps into their single-room prison, these 10 year old men don't scream.  Instead, there is a beautiful pan shot of the boys protecting each other.  How powerful.

Lastly and perhaps most poignant is a dreadful scene at the end of the film.  At first the Tutsis were captive in a church, at which point they were abandoned by the UN and effectively left to their deaths.  At this point however it is the Hutus who have taken refuge in the church and are now trapped.  A small child asks why the Tutsis are different.  A woman answers her that Tutsis have long fingers and lighter skin, all the while stroking the child's fingers and face. The visual effect is creepy, but the dialogue here is all important.  In a single question and answer these two have summed up the problem.  The child cannot understand how the oppressed are any different from she, and the only answer the "knowledgeable" adult has is that they are physically different, and not even remarkably so.

How indescribably awful that a million people were killed for having slightly longer fingers.

Overall, the most remarkable part of 100 Days is that it conveys the deep sense of horror without specifically dwelling on the genocide.  This is the genius of the film.  The audience walks away with a deeply ingrained sense of frustration, indignation, disgust and an incredible sadness without even seeing the full effect of the genocide on the Rwandan people.  A remarkable film.

4 comments:

Amanda said...

This movie is very moving and findig one aspect that affected me more than any other was hard. The scene with the boys and the gas station was really disturbing but at the same time very well done. The man holding the torch hesitates to set the station on fire and what amazed me was that the leader took it from him and threw it in the station. Usually a leader stays away from "assigntments" such as this one, what we usually see is the follower getting an order and obeying but by allowing the audience seeing the "follower" refusing shows that how some did not agree to what was taking place in their country. Also as you say how the boys do not scream indeed shows how strong they were and it almost made it seem as the people outside that were twice, or more, the boys ages are the real cowards when one would expect the boys to be the ones that were scared. Powerful movie in so many ways.

wendyw said...

Hi Anna,

Oh yeah...this IS a sad, sad movie. I also noticed the connection that you describe between the two scenes in the beginning and end where Batiste and Josette sit apart. This physical distance says so much in two very short shots. The first symbolically in the context of putting distance between themselves to inhibit their passion and connotes a hopeful future of connection both physically and socially through marriage and family. This contrasts with the scene after they reunite and both have experienced the horror of the war. In this scene they are not speaking and the distance between them is no longer innocent, passionate or hopeful, but heavy with the pain of loss, remorse and a myriad of feelings that accompany such horrible tragedy. These two scenes say so much about the devastation on a personal level.

Yes, Hughes could have probably shown more explicit scenes of the horror of this war, but, as you say, a little does go a long way. I think his slow and quiet build up in the beginning of the film, showing peaceful and beautiful scenes of Rwandan nature, the young couple in love, the conversations between the two families of disbelief that anything would harm them, and the night scenes of violence where the lighting added to the anonymity and scariness of the killers, all added to the effect of how hideous these 100 days truly were.

Bryan said...

This is a very compelling story and is very sad, in particular the gas station scene, which displays the harsh nature of the genocide being forced upon the Tutsi's and the children. Through the distinct use of close-ups and quick camera shifts, the expressions of the characters are revealed and are very powerful. A very good observation in noticing the camera shot of the two lovers physically set apart to suggest their undeniable, pre-destined path of despair. i noticed how the camera shots played a very valuable role in displaying the loss of faith and the falling apart of their dreams of being together. There is a sense of the wrongness of the genocide when the soldier hesitates to light the fire at the gas station, he is conflicted with his orders, but the overwhelming disallusionment of the violence propels the act to take place. Though the beginning of the movie is a love depiction, it is the transition of love to a very desperate situation, that reveals the movies point of view.

JPLundy said...

I do believe that you have the right idea when discussing the scene where initially the soldier left the Tutsis which inevitably lead to the death of the Tutsis taking refuge in the church. How ironic that consequently the Hutus went to seek refuge in the church where it subsequently leads to the death of the Hutus that were considered the important "leaders" of the Hutus. There is an inaccurate belief that a million Tutsi where killed because of their lighter skin and longer fingers, this was a stretch in my opinion, which could have been alleviated with simple dialogue from a single scene about the history of the conflicts. This film lacks the basic history of the conflict between the Hutus and the Tutsis and tends to place all the blame on the Hutus when the blame should be equally distributed to both tribes given the fact that the Tutsis had control of the land that the Hutus resided because of the French and Belgian control over the distribution of power. The history was erroneously conveyed which leads to presumptions which lack an understanding of the century long conflict.