Andrew OnwuboluMBE, better known by his stage name Rapman, is a British rapper, record producer, screenwriter, and film director. He is known for his three-part YouTube series Shiro's Story (2018), his debut feature film Blue Story (2019), and the Netflix superhero series Supacell (2024)
He made his debut with the Blue Story Trilogy (2013–2014), which he followed up with several charity music videos for SB.TV including Hope (2015), Pay As You Go (2016), and Promise (2017). After the success of Shiro's Story (2018), he signed with Jay-Z's Roc Nation.
Rapman made his debut with the Blue Story Trilogy (2013–2014), which depicted two best friends from different areas of London (Peckham and Deptford) who find themselves becoming enemies in a violent and insidious postcode war between their respective areas. The series was released on the YouTube channel SB.TV and gained positive feedback.[citation needed]
Following the success of Blue Story, Rapman began collaborating with SBTV founder Jamal Edwards on several charity music videos for the channel. These included Hope (2015), which dealt with blood donors, Rollercoaster (2016) which dealt with suicide, Pay As You Go (also 2016), which dealt with unemployed fathers, and Promise (2017), a short film produced for Comic Relief 2017, which dealt with domestic abuse.[citation needed]
Film and TV career
Shiro's Story
In 2018, Rapman created wrote, directed and produced the three-part YouTube musical crime drama series Shiro's Story, about a young Black man from London who enters a violent life of crime after he learns that his girlfriend's daughter is actually his best friend's. The series was inspired by a true story that Rapman heard from friends in Lewisham about a man whose daughter was actually his friend's.
In 2019, Rapman made his feature-length film debut by writing, directing and narrating Blue Story, a film adaptation of his YouTube series of the same name. The film, told through the medium of rap, starred Stephen Odubola, Micheal Ward, Eric Kofi-Abrefa, Khali Best, Karla-Simone Spence, Richie Campbell, Jo Martin and Junior Afolabi Salokun.
Despite the Vue Cinemas chain cancelling all screenings of the film following a machete incident in Birmingham, Blue Story received critical acclaim and grossed £4.7 million on a budget of £1.4 million, surpassing Noel Clarke's crime film Brotherhood to become the highest grossing British urban film of all time.
In February 2020, it was announced that Rapman was set to direct his second film, American Son, a remake of the 2009 French prison crime film A Prophet, starring Russell Crowe and Stephan James, for Paramount Pictures. However, it was eventually cancelled due to the negative impact that the COVID-19 pandemic had on the film and TV industry on halt.
In November 2021, it was announced that Netflix had comissioned Supacell, a six-part superhero series created, written and directed by Rapman about a group of seemingly ordinary black-British people (a delivery driver, a gang leader, a nurse, a financially struggling father and a Cockney drug dealer) who unexpectedly develop superpowers.[6] The series was released on 27 June 2024 to highly positive reviews from critics and audiences for its realistic portrayal of black people in Britain and for raising awareness of sickle cell disease. Upon its release, the series was number one on Netflix's global Top 10, with more than 18 million viewers in its first few weeks on the platform. In August 2024, the series was renewed for a second season.[7]