The Afrofuturist musical from Saul Williams and Anisia Uzeyman hits theaters on June 3rd.
, that story begins with an ending. More specifically, the death of Neptune’s grandmother. In the afterglow of life and the religious importance of moving on from the mortal plain, a comment from Neptune, played by both Cheryl Isheja and Elvis Ngabo, feels poignant: “my life never felt like my own.”
The journey from conception to finished film took over a decade — and it didn’t even start as a movie. “The project was initially conceived around 2011, and at that time it was conceived to be exactly what it is now: a musical and the graphic novel, with the distinction being that the musical was for the stage,” explained Williams.
Of course, this assumes that technology is merely a device like a phone, divorced from our interactions and input.would reject this idea. As Neptune runs from their home to find a place that allows them to live as themselves, they reach the off-the-grid hacktivist village that soon becomes home.
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