Swiss Filmmaker Makes Waves at Venice with AI-Enhanced Feature
Damien Hauser's 'Memory of Princess Mumbi' explores artificial intelligence in cinema while garnering international attention
Damien Hauser's 'Memory of Princess Mumbi' explores artificial intelligence in cinema while garnering international attention

"When I started making films at age seven, it was like playing a game. Shooting a film in an hour, no script, just experimenting with friends."
"There was no formal script, but I wrote an elaborate 40-page outline – very nerdy, very specific about the world, the histories and mythologies."
At just 24 years old, Swiss-Kenyan director Damien Hauser has stormed the Lido, proving that age is irrelevant when vision is absolute. His latest feature, Memory of Princess Mumbi, premiered at the Venice Film Festival this week, delivering a jolt of electricity to the international cinema circuit. Hauser is not merely participating; he is rewriting the rules of engagement. By boldly revamping the tenets of Afrofuturism, he has crafted a work that centers Black history while catapulting it into a speculative future.
The film stands as a defiant fusion of contradictions: a "lo-fi" indie production featuring non-professional actors, yet visually amplified by cutting-edge artificial intelligence to create grandiose, futuristic sceneries. While the industry grapples with the slow machinery of traditional production, Hauser has bypassed the gatekeepers entirely. This is not just a film premiere; it is a statement of intent from a director who refuses to wait for permission to innovate.
While Hollywood trembles at the ethical implications of generative technology, Hauser embraces the chaos with open arms. In a landscape where directors like Brady Corbet face backlash for even minor AI augmentations, Hauser’s Memory of Princess Mumbi operates with fearless transparency. He confronts the "ethical and creative tensions" of AI not by shying away, but by integrating them directly into his workflow to generate the sci-fi special effects that a low-budget indie could otherwise never afford.
The production methodology is equally radical. Abandoning the safety net of a traditional screenplay, Hauser operated off a 40-page outline—a "nerdy, very specific" guide to his world's mythology—allowing for raw improvisation. This guerrilla approach, shooting in Kenya without the suffocating constraints of massive funding webs, allowed him to capture a spirit of invention that feels urgent and alive. It is a masterclass in efficiency, proving that the only limit to cinematic scale in 2025 is imagination, not budget.
Set in the fictional city of Umata in the year 2093, the film presents a staggering paradox: a movie made with AI that explores a society rejecting technology. The narrative follows Kuve, a filmmaker documenting the aftermath of a devastating war where social movements fight to renounce the digital tools that nearly destroyed humanity mid-century. It is a mockumentary wrapped in a romance, exploring the friction between the organic and the synthetic.
Within this high-concept framework lies a tender core. Kuve falls for Mumbi, a free-spirited actress destined for royalty, who urges him to abandon artificial intelligence in his storytelling. This meta-narrative layer—a film about making a film without AI, created by a director explicitly using AI—creates a fascinating tension. Hauser forces the audience to grapple with the reality that while the characters yearn for a pre-digital past, the very medium depicting them is hurtling toward a synthetic future.
Born in Zurich in 2001, Damien Hauser is outpacing his contemporaries at a breakneck speed. With four feature films already under his belt by age 24—including Blind Love (2021) and After the Long Rains (2023)—he joins the ranks of prolific luminaries like Radu Jude. "When I started making films at age seven, it was like playing a game," Hauser reflects, noting with a hint of melancholy that his output has slowed from dozens of shorts a year to "only" one feature annually.
This relentless drive is a distinctly Swiss success story exported to the global stage. Hauser represents a new generation of Swiss creatives who are unafraid to blend their heritage—in his case, Swiss and Kenyan—to tell universal stories. As Memory of Princess Mumbi captivates audiences in Venice, it signals that Swiss cinema is not just observing the future; through artists like Hauser, it is actively constructing it.