Since there are a lot of refugees at the hotel, the demand for food is higher even though he doesn't charge any of the refugees since the situation is bad. When Paul goes on the way to the Hutu rebel market he is driving on top of Rwandan human corpses. He just feels bumps so he is really surprised and shock as he steps out of the car and fall into the corpses. Watching all of those corpses on the floor really frightened and shocked me. I can't believe that in just a few days, so many people could be killed by some just crazy tribe that decide to rebel instead of getting into an agreement. The road was full of corpses that not even Gregoire, which was a Hutu, couldn't talk. They both were amazed by such act of cruelty. .
The most emotional scene in the film was when Paul and his family were on their way to the United Nations camp for safety and Paul went off the "bus" because he wanted to stay at the hotel to help the refugees. For a moment, I almost cry because I thought that Paul was really kind, nice, and solitary for feeling sorry and empathy for other people which weren't even "his tribe". But on the other hand, I also feel that he was very inconsiderate by leaving his family to his own luck and abandoning his family. I try to put myself in Paul's place and think on the decision on leaving my family or helping my friends and neighbors and I think I wouldn't be like Paul. I would go with my family and then try to help them by sending help or calling influential people. It's not that I'm cruel or caring for other people but I think my family is first and I should stay with them. One connection I make from Things Fall Apart and Hotel Rwanda is that actually in both places (countries or villages), the societies fall apart. In Things Fall Apart, all the people in the villages fall apart by letting themselves influenced by the missionaries that came to conquer them not only in religion and beliefs but as land/country.