Cyprian Ekwensi’s The Passport of Mallam Ilia was printed in 1960, however for Ferdinand “Ferdy” Adimefe, producer and co-founder of Magic Carpet Studios, the story continues to be recent and worthy of consideration. “I learn that ebook years in the past and thought, if I ever get one million {dollars}, I’ll use it to make this into a movie,” Adimefe says.
Make a movie he did. That is the story of how Adimefe assembled an animation staff from scratch and a 7-year animation challenge that’s in its closing manufacturing phases.
The why
There are a variety of causes Adimefe was compelled by the novel. In a sea of African literature heavy with political and postcolonial weight, The Passport of Mallam Ilia stood out with its motion and wealthy portrayal of tradition.
“It’s a travelogue. The story strikes from Nigeria after which jumps into Cameroon and, ultimately, Saudi Arabia. Having a film that touches three international locations made an excellent case for [the team],”Adimefe says.
When Magic Carpet Studios ran a ballot in 2018 to check the Nigerian viewers’s curiosity in an animation of the ebook, the response was constructive. Netflix later ran the same ballot in 2024, and 95% of respondents voted for Mallam Ilia because the Nigerian ebook they most wished tailored. The studio realised they weren’t the one ones haunted by the impressiveness of the story.
“Individuals in numerous components of Africa, together with Ghana and East Africa, wished to do one thing with the ebook. We didn’t realise how a lot of an viewers already existed.”
With this new revelation, the staff set to work in 2018.
First issues first: Expertise
Supply: Magic Carpet Studios
The manufacturing started with a small however devoted staff of animators, illustrators, writers, and editors keen to experiment and study on the job, in keeping with Adimefe. Because the imaginative and prescient turned clearer and the calls for of manufacturing grew, so did the staff. Over time, it expanded to incorporate extra illustrators and animators, lots of whom had been skilled internally or got here on board by suggestions from inside the neighborhood.
In an early bid to institutionalise animation coaching and enhance the variety of expertise, Adimefe’s staff approached the Yaba Faculty of Know-how hoping to spark a dialog that will start an Animation Division. When informed such a transfer wanted Nationwide Universities Fee (NUC) approval, which often takes as much as 5 years, they wrote on to the NUC.
What adopted subsequent was not motion from NUC, however phrase from Yabatech’s head of the artwork division. He allowed some college students to hitch Adimefe’s staff.
Lots of the staff members had by no means labored on a characteristic size animation challenge earlier than, in keeping with Adimefe. “Some guys stop after some time as a result of it was actually troublesome, however some stored coming,” he says. “All people that works with us within the studio was skilled on the challenge. At one level, the studio was a ‘boys’ hostel’ of a kind.”
Magic Carpet Studios has additionally collaborated globally with groups from South Africa, India, the UK, and US on totally different features of manufacturing. “We labored with 70% Nigerian skills and 30% had been overseas arms,” Adimefe says.
Picture Supply: Magic Carpet Studios
How is animation made, actually?
Discovering the suitable staff will not be sufficient. Essentially the most gifted people, in the event that they don’t perceive or refuse to stick to established workflows for writing, manufacturing, submit‑manufacturing and distribution, can doom a challenge.
One illustrative instance comes from the early “video‑movie period” in Nollywood, the place a flood of filmmakers entered the business with out understanding the method or respecting timelines. Director Lancelot Oduwa Imasuen and others as soon as recalled how movies had been generally shot in simply three or 4 days. The consequence was a glut of low‑high quality movies: poorly written, swiftly edited, and sometimes failing to search out distributors or audiences. This breakdown in course of, and never essentially in expertise, led to burnout, deserted initiatives, and a tradition of cinematic mediocrity which some business consultants declare are nonetheless existent in the present day.
Adimefe says that for animation, the method “all comes right down to the script”. Writing for animation could be very totally different from writing for a dwell motion movie. “There’s an economic system of phrases. You permit room for the image and sound to inform the story,” he explains.
The studio spent eight months growing the script, written by Nigerian animation screenwriter M.I. Thomas, together with a month in Kano for historic accuracy.
The subsequent step was animatics. Merely put, animatics are animated storyboards which are used to visualise the timing, pacing, and total move of an animation challenge earlier than the ultimate animation is finished.
In Magic Carpet Studios’ case, this course of lasted from 2021 to 2022, as a result of the staff drew each single body. With a two-hour characteristic 2D animation at 24 frames per second (24fps), that’s almost 173,000 drawings.
The staff’s subsequent step was dummy voicing. Afterwards, the staff went into the animation course of by delegating totally different assignments to totally different skills on the staff: The “much less proficient guys” labored on the much less advanced scenes, the “very proficient guys” sat on the advanced scenes, whereas overseas arms labored on particular results. “It’s actually like a matrix in that you must determine how you set the entire thing collectively,”Adimefe says about the whole animation course of.
A $2 million dream
Initially at $1 million, the movie’s funds ballooned to $8 million when South African collaborators joined and pegged the next normal for worldwide co-productions. After totally different conversations, each groups settled for a $2 million funds.
After setbacks, fundraising makes an attempt, and a number of investor walkouts, Magic Carpet Studios ultimately raised about $1.4 million, partly by reinvesting cash earned from industrial initiatives like work completed for Cartoon Community.
“We knew the potential of the film. Once we sat again to estimate, we realised what we would have liked was $500,000 to complete: $400k for post-production and $100k for advertising.”
Nonetheless, the staff confronted a significant roadblock: distribution. “We couldn’t get a distribution deal. We’d go to funders, and they’d ask if we had one. Once we mentioned no, they’d inform us to go onerous on the distributors. We received caught.”
Then COVID hit in 2020.
“When COVID hit, we form of packed our baggage as a result of we didn’t know if the world was going to proceed,” Adimefe recollects. In a closing push, the studio turned to crowdfunding, launching a marketing campaign on WeFunder to assist attain the $2 million objective, whereas a couple of different buyers additionally got here on board.
Licensing, world technique and what’s subsequent
To this point, Magic Carpet has spent between $30,000–$50,000 on software program licenses, they usually’ve arrange a Colorado-based IP construction to enchantment to U.S. buyers due to beneficial IP and tax legal guidelines within the US state.
One of many licences they’ve spent cash on is Toon Increase, the gold normal software program in animation. “Know-how is pricey, and there are [costs] you can’t minimize,”Adimefe says.
A U.S. agent is dealing with worldwide outreach, with hopes of distribution by FilmOne or streaming on Netflix, which, in keeping with Adimefe, paid $13.5 million final 12 months for a South African animated movie.
Adimefe says that “Netflix has little or no animation from Africa,” and with this challenge, it’s heading in the right direction to alter the narrative.
A letter of intent from a significant European distribution firm and rising pageant curiosity imply that the challenge may quickly be a worldwide breakout.
Cleanups and the ultimate lap
As of this report, the staff is within the “cleanups” stage: finalising frames, merging scenes, and sharpening music. Adimefe reveals that the staff is 70% in with the superior manufacturing. The goal is an April 2026 launch.
A standout characteristic would be the music. They’re budgeting $100,000 for a rating and have goals of engaged on the 7-track album with Nigerian music expertise like Cobhams and 121Selah. “We have already got the lyrics. We wish one thing just like the Starvation Video games soundtrack. One thing unforgettable,”Adimefe says.
Adimefe says the objective is to introduce not solely African animation to a worldwide viewers, but in addition a singular African sound. To realize this, his staff is tapping into the chance Lagos has supplied as each startup and artistic hubs. “If you’re in Lagos, you wish to faucet into the ability of sound,”he says.
It’s simple to envy the licensing offers or future Netflix splash that will come. However few will see the seven years of unpaid coaching, tens of 1000’s of drawings, investor heartbreak, nights in a studio-turned-hostel, and an unshakeable dream that has constructed The Passport of Mallam Ilia.
“It’s loads of work, however worthy certainly,”Adimefe says.
Mark your calendars! Moonshot by TechCabal is again in Lagos on October 15–16! Be part of Africa’s prime founders, creatives & tech leaders for two days of keynotes, mixers & future-forward concepts. Early fowl tickets now 20% off—don’t snooze! moonshot.techcabal.com

Elevate your perspective with NextTech Information, the place innovation meets perception.
Uncover the most recent breakthroughs, get unique updates, and join with a worldwide community of future-focused thinkers.
Unlock tomorrow’s developments in the present day: learn extra, subscribe to our publication, and grow to be a part of the NextTech neighborhood at NextTech-news.com

