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THE BATTLE FOR LAIKIPIA

( 2024 )
Official Selection Out of Competition, El Gouna Green Star |
 
Kenya
,
Greece
,
United States
 |
 Samburu, English, Swahili |
 94 min

About the film

The Laikipia region has been experiencing the effects of climate change for decades, as both pastoralists and ranchers rely on its grasslands to sustain their cattle and wildlife. When droughts coincide with elections, conflict erupts.

Director

Daphne Matziaraki, Peter Murimi

Daphne Matziaraki is a Greek documentary film director. Her first short, 4.1 Miles (2016), received an Academy Award nomination. Her second short, Into the Sea won multiple awards. Daphne has directed, shot, produced and edited films that chronicle major social and political and environmental developments in Europe, Africa, the U.S. and the Middle East. Peter Murimi is a multiple award-winning Kenyan documentary director/producer focusing on hard-hitting social issues. His feature-length documentary I Am Samuel (2020) played at major festivals. His first major win was the CNN Africa Journalist of the Year Award for his intimate film about Female Genital Mutilation among his Kuria community, Walk to Womanhood (2004).

Producer

Toni Kamau

Production Company

Screenplay

Cinematography

Daphne Matziaraki, Peter Murimi, Maya Craig

Editing

Sam Soko

Sound

William R Fritch

Cast

Contacts

Internatonal Sales: Metfilm Studio, Clare Mitch, assistant@metfilmstudio.com

Producer

Toni Kamau

Production Company

Screenplay

Cinematography

Daphne Matziaraki, Peter Murimi, Maya Craig

Editing

Sam Soko

Sound

William R Fritch

Cast

Contacts

Internatonal Sales: Metfilm Studio, Clare Mitch, assistant@metfilmstudio.com

More About Film

Set against the breathtaking yet parched landscapes of central Kenya, The Battle for Laikipia delves deep into a simmering conflict that has reached a boiling point. Directed by Daphne Matziaraki and Kenyan filmmaker Peter Murimi, the documentary takes a hard, unflinching look at a battle over land and resources, pitting the semi-nomadic Samburu people against ranchers of European descent. As drought and dwindling water supplies reshape life on the Laikipia plateau, the film shows how climate change has reignited long-standing tensions, turning grazing grounds into battlegrounds. With a restrained and balanced approach, Matziaraki and Murimi present a nuanced narrative of two communities grappling for survival. On one side, we see the Samburu, whose traditional practices of free-range herding clash with the fences and property lines imposed by the ranchers. On the other side, we meet third and fourth-generation settlers who view themselves as equally Kenyan, clinging to their land and livelihood even as the drought pushes both sides toward conflict. The film carefully avoids easy villainy, showing the complex intersections of tradition, property, and climate in a land where colonial history is still felt in every blade of grass.Through arresting cinematography and deft editing, The Battle for Laikipia captures the drama of the land itself, a place where even the animals seem caught in the crossfire. Cows and goats are slaughtered at night, and violence erupts with tragic regularity. As each community’s needs grow more desperate, the film bears witness to a conflict that feels like a harbinger of global issues to come. This is not just a portrait of Kenya—it’s a haunting glimpse into a future where environmental crises force humanity to reckon with its past and confront an uncertain path forward. The film won the Amazon MGM Studios Producers Award for Nonfiction at the 2024 Sundance Film festival.Nicole Guillemet

Producer

Toni Kamau

Screenplay

-

Cinematography

Daphne Matziaraki, Peter Murimi, Maya Craig

Editing

Sam Soko

Sound

William R Fritch

Cast

-

Contact

Internatonal Sales: Metfilm Studio, Clare Mitch, assistant@metfilmstudio.com

More About Film

Set against the breathtaking yet parched landscapes of central Kenya, The Battle for Laikipia delves deep into a simmering conflict that has reached a boiling point. Directed by Daphne Matziaraki and Kenyan filmmaker Peter Murimi, the documentary takes a hard, unflinching look at a battle over land and resources, pitting the semi-nomadic Samburu people against ranchers of European descent. As drought and dwindling water supplies reshape life on the Laikipia plateau, the film shows how climate change has reignited long-standing tensions, turning grazing grounds into battlegrounds. With a restrained and balanced approach, Matziaraki and Murimi present a nuanced narrative of two communities grappling for survival. On one side, we see the Samburu, whose traditional practices of free-range herding clash with the fences and property lines imposed by the ranchers. On the other side, we meet third and fourth-generation settlers who view themselves as equally Kenyan, clinging to their land and livelihood even as the drought pushes both sides toward conflict. The film carefully avoids easy villainy, showing the complex intersections of tradition, property, and climate in a land where colonial history is still felt in every blade of grass.Through arresting cinematography and deft editing, The Battle for Laikipia captures the drama of the land itself, a place where even the animals seem caught in the crossfire. Cows and goats are slaughtered at night, and violence erupts with tragic regularity. As each community’s needs grow more desperate, the film bears witness to a conflict that feels like a harbinger of global issues to come. This is not just a portrait of Kenya—it’s a haunting glimpse into a future where environmental crises force humanity to reckon with its past and confront an uncertain path forward. The film won the Amazon MGM Studios Producers Award for Nonfiction at the 2024 Sundance Film festival.Nicole Guillemet