Film & Video

Wanuri Kahiu's 'Pumzi' and the Future of African Sci-Fi Film

How a Kenyan filmmaker's short film pioneered Afrofuturism in cinema and inspired a new wave of African speculative storytelling.

O
Otieno Writer
Thursday, 28 November 20245 min read835 views
Wanuri Kahiu's 'Pumzi' and the Future of African Sci-Fi Film

A Vision of the Future

Wanuri Kahiu's 2009 short film "Pumzi" (Swahili for "breath") presented a post-apocalyptic Africa where water is the most precious resource. Made on a modest budget, it became a landmark of African science fiction cinema.

Afrofuturism on Screen

Before Black Panther made Afrofuturism a household term, Kahiu was already imagining African futures rooted in both technology and tradition. "Pumzi" showed that African filmmakers could create compelling speculative fiction without Hollywood budgets.

"I wanted to show that Africa has always been a place of innovation and imagination." — Wanuri Kahiu

The Ripple Effect

Kahiu's work, including the acclaimed "Rafiki," has inspired a generation of East African filmmakers to explore genres beyond social realism. From Nairobi's emerging VFX studios to streaming platforms seeking African content, the infrastructure for African sci-fi is finally catching up to the vision.

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