The movie takes place during a genocide and some of the humans in this movie are treated like dirt.
Lots of weapons are discharged, people are lined up against walls and shot.
Pran falls in a pit and discovers to his horror that the path he was walking on is paved with the skeletal remains of murdered Cambodians.
The violence is sad but not bloody, it is disturbing like Hotel Rwanda.
A little boy and an older man are both killed when a land mine explodes; Pran grieves and creates a funeral ceremony for them in the jungle.
A child is seen leading a man away and he is killed, which is later reveled to be that the Khmer Rouge ordered the kid to suffocate him with a plastic bag.
A man is beaten and tied up but a soldier (whom Pran and Sydney saved earlier on in the film) rescues him.
A man shouts in Pran's face and prevents him from hugging his wife because "there's no time".
Pran has to be left behind because of his ethnic origin, and Schanberg, who has become his close friend, is deeply saddened because he believes Pran will be killed.
Men are held at gunpoint but not shot; Pran talks them out of shooting.
Cambodians are killed by bombs and dead bodies as well as mentally traumatized survivors are seen in the background.
A bomb explodes at a table.
Lots of loud, sudden and frightening music during harrowing scenes in the film.
A Khmer Rouge leader befriends Pran secretly and they make a pact for Pran to escape and take the leader's child to a refugee camp. Not long afterwards, the leader is killed, which Pran sees from his hiding place.
A French woman sobs hysterically at an embassy because she has married a Cambodian and the Khmer Rouge have forbidden her husband to leave the country.
Ser Moun (Pran's wife) cries upon hearing that she has to leave the country before the Khmer Rouge arrive in the city. Later on she is seen in a New Jersey housing project crying and saying she knows Pran is dead.