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ANIKULAPO: “I started working on Anikulapo six years ago,” –Kunle Afolayan

Asked whether the recently released movie will get a sequel, Afolayan said, “Yea; the whole world wants the story to continue.”
Ace filmmaker, Kunle Afolayan
Ace filmmaker, Kunle Afolayan

NIGERIAN popular ace filmmaker, Kunle Afolayan has revealed that he began working on Anikulapo, the movie currently making waves on social media, six years ago.

“I started working on Anikulapo six years ago and I wanted to make a series because it is a story that I feel would stretch like Game of Thrones,” he said on Channels Television’s Sunrise programme on Saturday, October 8, 2022.

The 47-year-old said he pitched the idea to international streaming and production company, Netflix but the firm advised him to make it into a film and continue the story depending on the reception.

Kunle Afolayan on set
Kunle Afolayan on set

Asked whether the recently released movie will get a sequel, Afolayan said, “Yea; the whole world wants the story to continue.”

Anikulapo, which translates as ‘death in the pouch, centres on a stranger who strikes an illicit affair with one of the king’s young wives, which eventually gets him sentenced to death after the affair was discovered.

Kunle Afolayan, and his cast
Kunle Afolayan, and his cast

The deeply cultural movie featured veteran actors such as Sola Sobowale, Bimbo Ademoye, Kunle Remi, Hakeem Kae Kazeem, Taiwo Hassan, Aisha Lawal, Moji Afolayan, Adebayo Salami, Eyiyemi Afolayan, Ariyiike Dimples, Omo Ologede, Yemi Elebuibon, and many others.

Giving a behind-the-stage revelation of the movie on Saturday, Afolayan said the movie is an excerpt from Odu Ifa (Ifa literary corpus).

He said most times Muslims and Christians take lessons from chapters of the Qu’ran and Bible respectively and he thought of bringing some lessons out of a parable in Odu Ifa which is an embodiment of the Yoruba divination system.

The award-winning movie expert also said his goal is to inform, entertain, educate, and communicate cultural values.

“I want to tell stories that capture values, cultural values, family values and all of that without necessarily neglecting the essence of why we do content which is entertainment,” he explained.

Afolayan further said that everything about the computer-generated imagery of the movie and other parts of production were done in Nigeria.

CHANNELS