Ugandan film producer Raymond Malinga, whose work will feature in an upcoming Disney anthology of animated films from across Africa, hopes the project will bring African animation to the world.
“Kizazi
Moto: Generation Fire”, is a ten-part collection of short animations by
producers from six African countries that is set to premier on the Disney Plus
streaming platform later this year.
Malinga, 32, is one of 14 film makers from South Africa,
Egypt, Nigeria, Zimbabwe, Uganda and Kenya who are contributing to the
anthology of sci-fi and fantasy stories set in Africa’s future. Oscar-winning
film director Peter Ramsey is serving as executive producer on the project.
“The narrative in Africa has been, you switch on the news
right now, I bet you it’s (about) something bad that just happened,” Malinga
told Reuters at his studio in Kampala.
The positives gets lost in the narrative, Malinga says, and
this should change.
“For me (the anthology) is an opportunity to contribute to
that conversation,” he said.
Malinga, 32, who holds a degree in animation and visual
effects from a university in Malaysia, started his company, Creatures Animation
Studios, in 2015.
Their big break came in 2017 when their short animated film
“A Kalabanda Ate My Homework” was showcased at the Cannes Film Festival and won
six awards, including for best animation film, at the African International
Film Festival in Nigeria the following year.
His team, which has grown over the last few years to 10
people, works from a small dark studio sandwiched between cubicles of other
startups in a makeshift innovation village built from repurposed shipping
containers.
African content is gaining popularity globally thanks to
growing commissions for series and short films by streaming services like
Netflix and Multichoice’s Showmax.
In Africa, however, foreign content still dominates and
Malinga said that the Disney anthology was an opportunity to combat stereotypes
and bring African consumers more content that features people who are like
them.
As Malinga’s studio brand and talent pool grows, he said,
they are venturing into gaming and also exploring opportunities in virtual and
augmented reality.
His dream, he said, is to bring on the world stage African
film and animation, to replicate the success of other African industries.
“Afro music has started going around the world… we have some
of our comedians going around and I am like, why not animation too, why not
film?” Malinga said.
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