Time Hoppers: from e-Book to franchise
How an Edmonton production studio that creates Muslim-oriented entertainment for kids turned a story about the Silk Road from an e-book to a game, web series and full-length feature film.
In 2017, producer, writer and director Flordeliza Dayrit started writing Time Hoppers, a children’s e-book about the history of the Silk Road and the Islamic Golden Age. She was fascinated by the era, which spanned from the 8th to the 13th centuries, and knew she had something special on her hands. “It’s just never-ending history that’s sort of unknown,” Dayrit explains over the phone from Calgary, where she’s visiting her daughter.
Dayrit was curious about the scientists of the Islamic Golden Age, in particular. There was Al-Khwarizmi, a mathematician born in 780 who is credited with popularizing algebra while travelling along the Silk Road. Astronomer Maryam al-Asturlabi also piqued Dayrit’s interest. Al-Asturlabi was born in 10th-century Syria and invented an instrument used to measure the altitude of celestial bodies above the horizon. Then there was Ibn Al-Haytham, who is known as a pioneer of optic science.
“I would ask my friends, both Muslims and non-Muslims, ‘Do you know about the Silk Road and these people?’” Dayrit recalls. “Ninety-five percent of the time they had no idea what I was talking about.”

The Expansion of Time Hoppers
It didn’t take long for Dayrit and Michael Milo, her husband and co-founder at both the Edmonton-based production company Milo Productions and Muslim Kids TV (muslimkids.tv) — a children’s entertainment platform for Muslim audiences — to envision a series and brand around Time Hoppers that would showcase the adventures of four time-travelling children, with their first stop being a trip back to the Islamic Golden Age.
“We saw the potential for something more,” Dayrit says. “History is so vast, so they could go anywhere, anytime.”
The show’s lead characters are four students from a gifted school — Abdullah, Aysha, Khalid and Layla. They represent the diversity of Muslim cultures, including multiple hijab-wearing characters, Aysha among them.
For Dayrit, working on Time Hoppers wasn’t just about creating a fun show for kids, it was about seeing herself represented on screen. “As an immigrant, I watched CBC before and after school and I thought it’d be nice to see someone like myself on that TV one day,” she says. “My goal has been to showcase stories that are relatable to my community.”
They received funding from the CMF and Shaw Rocket Fund to create the Time Hoppers web series, which they began to develop while producing other programs for Muslim Kids TV.
Then, in 2021, Dayrit and Milo came across Canada Media Fund’s Innovation & Experimentation Program, which funds the development of interactive digital media, such as video games, and thought developing a game alongside the TV series would be a great way to build the brand. “We were able to really create the world,” Dayrit says. “We had the possibility of expanding it more.”
They developed a game prototype and demoed it at schools and conferences like the Kidscreen Summit. “We saw incredible interest,” says Dayrit. “People would line up and wait for the whole day to play the game.”
The game was released in 2024 and downloaded more than 100,000 times in three months.
Pivoting From Series to Movie
Meanwhile, Dayrit, Milo and their team of animators and producers were busy working on their 13-episode series which, unfortunately, received a lukewarm reception from distributors. “The past years have been really tough,” Milo says. “Sales and interest of the different platforms and broadcasters has really dwindled. The only thing that they’re interested in is ancient IPs that are really risk-free. They weren’t interested in new ideas.”
But based on the game’s positive reception, by the end of 2024 Milo and Dayrit had pivoted to creating a feature-length animated film, which would become Time Hoppers: The Silk Road. “The movie space is less crowded,” Milo explains. “We thought perhaps there’s a bigger appetite for an indie kids’ movie.”
It took the animation team a year and a half to complete the film. “We had all the assets already, so we could repurpose them into a movie without an incredible amount of cost,” Milo explains.
The historical figures that fascinated Dayrit became characters in the film as the four students travelled back in time to prevent a villain from sabotaging the scientists’ discoveries. Milo Productions contributed their own money, and sought funds from private investors.

Getting the Film to Theatres
Milo says they took a risk in pivoting to a movie, but it paid off. First, they received interest from Italia Film International, which distributes movies from Disney, Pixar and Marvel in the Middle East. On October 30, 2025, Time Hoppers had its Middle East premiere, including an Arabic-language version that screened in Saudi Arabia.
That premiere was followed by a limited North American release on February 7 and 8, 2026. In the U.S., Fathom Entertainment screened the film in 660 theatres, while in Canada Landmark Cinemas showed it in 26 theatres, making Time Hoppers the first widely released children’s film by Muslim producers and creatives with a cast of predominantly Muslim characters.
Cineplex is planning a small re-release in Canada to coincide with Eid celebrations after Ramadan later this month. There will also be a U.K. release in April, and plans are in the works for releases in Turkey, Malaysia, Indonesia and South Asia. Vision Films will do post-theatrical distribution on TVOD and pay-per-view.
Dayrit and Milo would love to get a major streamer interested, too. “We're hoping that in the digital space, that's where we'll be able to have a much broader general audience appreciate the movie,” Milo says.
Meanwhile, Milo Productions is finishing the last two episodes of the Time Hoppers series this spring and summer, with a goal of releasing it in September 2026. Once that’s complete, it’ll be on to the next movie. Dayrit says there’s already demand for a Time Hoppers sequel, thanks in part to the film’s cliffhanger ending. “Everyone’s asking me, ‘When is the next movie coming out?’”
She’s excited about the franchise’s potential. “This is an untapped market that we need to reach, and we know that we can do it right,” she says. “We’re confident that we can open up more markets and continue to do this work.”