Thursday, 2 July 2015

EXO CNN Report... LIVE

Is it time for an African superhero to save the day?





The original concept was for an animated cartoon, so he developed a seven-minute trailer to showcase his work. But after a year of shopping it to distributors and producers, Okupe was out of luck.
"A lot of people were afraid about taking a risk with a character that was from Africa because there was no fanbase to prove that this is going to work. I had people tell me, 'you have a nice product. You might wanna change some of the characters around...'
"I would say 'I respect your opinion but the reason why I do this is I grew up in Nigeria and I want to give the country a superhero. I don't want to have to compromise what the vision was to make a quick buck."

A platform for other artists

Refusing to let this be a nail in the coffin for E.X.O., Okupe decided to change tack. He turned the animation into a trailer for a graphic novel and collaborate with artists back home to help him color the world of Lagoon City and bring the graphic novel to life. He enlisted Ayodele Elegba as editor along with artist Sunkanmi AkinboyeGodwin Akpan (who designed the cover art) andRaphael Kazeem on colors.
"We have such a wealth of talent who are not getting the exposure they deserve. Most of the time when you hear news about Nigeria, it's mostly negative things. I'm trying to show a different side of Africa that people are not regularly exposed to.
"When I decided to make E.X.O, I wanted to make a character that was very intertwined with technology because that is a big thing in Africa. The tech industry is going through an economic moment -- I really wanted to shine a light on that and say 'we are doing great things in Africa. There are tons of people in Africa and it's really time that people pay attention to Nigeria and Africa as a whole.'"
Several months on, and the book is almost ready. The team are making final tweaks to artwork so now Okupe had to find financing for publishing. Wanting to also show that there could be a huge fan community for a product like "E.X.O," the resourceful designer decided to crowdfund the project.
"I had already paid the money for the artwork. All that was left was to raise money for printing so the goal was to get $3,500 to print 500 books.
"We hit that target in about two days and for the rest of the Kickstarter campaign we got $10,000. It was then that I knew this was the right path. Any failure I felt before -- not getting the animation, getting rejected by so many distributors and producers, people telling me my idea is not going to work -- it finally justified the fact I never quit on myself."
The graphic novel is set to be the first in a trilogy with a tentative release date in August.
"I want that if I put my book beside a Spiderman or a Batman or Superman, I don't want it to be like 'oh yeah, that one is from Africa.' We can also do something of great quality and put it out there for the world to see."
Read the first chapter of "E.X.O: The Legend of Wale Williams" below.

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