79
Metascore
40 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90The Hollywood ReporterMichael RechtshaffenThe Hollywood ReporterMichael RechtshaffenCheadle impressively carries the entire picture, delivering the kind of note-perfect performance that's absolutely deserving of Oscar consideration.
- 90The New YorkerDavid DenbyThe New YorkerDavid DenbyThe film turns into a triumph for Don Cheadle, who never steps outside the character for emotional grandstanding or easy moralism.
- 90TimeRichard SchickelTimeRichard SchickelIt is a powerful portrait of a slightly befuddled man who, when inhuman demands were placed on him, found within himself an unexpected response.
- 80L.A. WeeklyErnest HardyL.A. WeeklyErnest HardyHotel Rwanda, based on real lives and events, aims unequivocally to break your heart.
- 80NewsweekDavid AnsenNewsweekDavid AnsenUltimately, one's reservations are overwhelmed by the story's urgency; it's impossible not to be shattered.
- 75Rolling StonePeter TraversRolling StonePeter TraversGeorge has been criticized for simplifying a complex story into an African "Schindler's List." But despite flaws in execution, this is a film of rare courage and imperishable heart.
- 70VarietyScott FoundasVarietyScott FoundasThe genocide of some one million Rwandan Tutsis by their Hutu neighbors remains a disgraceful and too-little-known episode in recent world history. Alas, Terry George's ineffectual Hotel Rwanda only partly rectifies that problem, taking what ought to have been a complex, powerful inquiry and simplifying it to a story about the resilience of the human spirit.
- 70Village VoiceMichael AtkinsonVillage VoiceMichael AtkinsonIt's a gut-twisting story handled, largely and predictably, with asbestos mitts.
- 70Los Angeles TimesKenneth TuranLos Angeles TimesKenneth TuranThe story it tells is such a wrenching one it cannot help but move us, especially when the performance of a lifetime by Don Cheadle is added to the mix.
- 40Film ThreatPhil HallFilm ThreatPhil HallThe film presents the Rwandans in the worst possible way: venal, corrupt, vicious, stupid, barbaric and completely incapable of governing themselves. Honestly, I've seen more intelligent and sympathetic depictions of Africans in Tarzan movies.