Not just as a religious or historical event, but as the first human choice to harm another human. From that point on, I treated the Earth as if it had been broken. As if something inside it collapsed and never fully healed again.
After that moment, the film travels through time, not as a timeline, but as a feeling.
Wars follow wars. Destruction becomes normalized. Violence evolves, grows, and finds new forms. I focused on how humans didn’t only destroy each other, but also destroyed everything around them.
I wanted to highlight the animals that went extinct because of human actions, species that disappeared silently, without wars or headlines. At the same time, I focused on humans killed by other humans, through massacres, endless conflicts, and large-scale destruction that became part of history books instead of human stories.
The film also reflects on moments where humanity proved how far it could go:
Nuclear bombs, capable of erasing cities in seconds.
And modern tragedies that are still happening today, the aggression on Gaza, and the war in Sudan, where innocent people continue to pay the price of decisions they didn’t make.
This project is not political, and it doesn’t try to explain who is right or wrong.
It’s Personal.
It’s about looking at the world we live in now and realizing that none of this started suddenly. It all goes back to the same idea, humans choosing violence over compassion.







