I first watched Koyaanisqatsi sometime around 1990 and I was left speechless. I cried while I watched it and after.

Without words it tells the story of modern industrial human societies, particularly those of the Global North. A story of alienation, cruelty and destruction that was well underway at the time it was filmed and which we’ve seen continue at increased pace in the 40 years since. And, in 2024, it would seem that it is a story we will not deviate from.

Five translations of the Hopi word koyaanisqatsi:

“crazy life"“life in turmoil"“life out of balance"“life disintegrating"“a state of life that calls for another way of living”

In the years since I’ve watched it again several times as a kind of ongoing acknowledgement meditation. We are racing into oblivion.

According to the director:

“These films have never been about the effect of technology, of industry on people. It’s been that everyone: politics, education, things of the financial structure, the nation state structure, language, the culture, religion, all of that exists within the host of technology. So it’s not the effect of, it’s that everything exists within [technology]. It’s not that we use technology, we live technology. Technology has become as ubiquitous as the air we breathe …”

The trailer.