Supacell Is Rapman’s South London Take On TV Classic Heroes: ‘It Was A Massive Inspiration’
Supacell Is Rapman’s South London Take On TV Classic Heroes: ‘It Was A Massive Inspiration’
The director of Blue Story is back with a Netflix series about super-powered Londoners. Read more at Empire.
For his follow-up to Blue Story, Rapman is going big. The multi-talented creator announced himself as a filmmaker to watch with his hit debut feature film – earning sizeable box office and a raft of positive reviews, despite controversial cinema bans on his tale of childhood friends driven apart by gang violence. (A screening of the film in Birmingham was itself the site of a conflict, sparking a safety outcry.) His latest project, Supacell, isn’t a film but a Netflix series – an original show about a group of South Londoners who develop superpowers, exploring how their lives are forever changed.
While the idea of ordinary people receiving extraordinary abilities is a familiar format, Rapman is bringing his own personal perspective to it – while drawing from what came before in beloved shows like Heroes and Misfits. “I loved Heroes,” he tells Empire. “It was the closest to my image of what I thought a show about superpowers should be like. It was a massive inspiration.” And while he’s bringing in genre elements, the realistic underpinnings of Blue Story are set to remain. “I’ve always been a massive fan of superheroes,” he says. “I just wanted to do something a little more grounded. Something you could watch and think, ‘If I had powers, I would probably end up doing what he’s doing.’”
Among the sprawling cast of characters, there’s Tosin Cole’s time-travelling Michael, Nadine Mills’ telekinetic Sabrina – and, as seen above, Josh Tedeku’s Tazer. He’s a character who begins as the leader of a street gang – but has a bigger destiny in store. “People say, ‘We’ve had enough of this gang stuff,’ and I get it,” Rapman says. “I could never write a show in South London, and not show that world. I saw that world for 20 years of my life. For me not to put that in, I would be hiding a piece of myself that I know exists.” He has long-term plans for where the character goes next. “I’ve got such a journey I want Tazer to go down. I want to take this guy out of this world. But you can’t ever reach any teenagers or kids doing this if they don’t believe them from the beginning.”
Out June 27 on Netflix