It is recommended to hire a reputable, experienced local security company. They should provide both armed and unarmed guards, along with risk assessment and management services to ensure the safety of the crew, equipment, and filming locations.
Freetown
Makeni, Bonthe
English
Sierra Leonean leone (SLL)
Tropical Climate
Apply online here: Sierra Leone eVisa Portal
These documents must be submitted to the relevant authorities, such as the Sierra Leone National Film Commission or the Ministry of Tourism and Cultural Affairs.
Film permits in Sierra Leone are issued by the Sierra Leone National Film Commission, which oversees and regulates film production in the country.
Securing private film locations involves Hoodlum negotiating with location owners, obtaining the necessary permits and permissions, and ensuring that all logistical and administrative arrangements are in place for a smooth filming process.
The cost of using a private film location is determined on a case-by-case basis. Location owners or managers usually request a production bio with project details before providing a specific quote.
Drone operators must obtain a permit from the Sierra Leone Civil Aviation Authority (SLCAA) before flying. Operators must comply with regulations regarding airspace, altitude restrictions, and proximity to people and sensitive areas.
Importing a drone requires a permit from the Sierra Leone Customs Service and the National Telecommunications Commission (NATCOM). Importers must also comply with regulations related to customs clearance, taxes, and frequency authorization.
Applicants must submit a completed application form, proof of drone registration, proof of liability insurance, a copy of the drone operator’s license, and a detailed flight plan.
Importation requires a commercial invoice, bill of lading, certificate of origin, proof of customs duty payment, a permit from NATCOM, and a clearance certificate from SLCAA.
Drone permits in are issued by the Sierra Leone Civil Aviation Authority (SLCAA).
The processing time for a drone permit typically ranges from 7 to 14 working days after submitting a completed application with all required documents.
The cost of a drone permit generally ranges between $200 and $500, depending on the type of permit, duration of flight operations, and other factors.
Sierra Leone is not a Carnet country.
As a non-Carnet country, temporary importation of film equipment requires obtaining a temporary import permit, paying a customs bond or deposit, and completing a customs declaration form. This process allows film crews to temporarily bring equipment into Sierra Leone for a specified period.
Film crew members must present a valid passport, a completed customs declaration form, a temporary import permit, a commercial invoice for equipment, and a letter of introduction from the production company or local film commission.
Customs clearance for film equipment in Sierra Leone is issued by the National Revenue Authority (NRA).
Infrastructure and logistics can present challenges, so careful planning and local expertise are crucial for a successful shoot.
It is recommended to hire a reputable, experienced local security company. They should provide both armed and unarmed guards, along with risk assessment and management services to ensure the safety of the crew, equipment, and filming locations.
No film incentive / film rebate

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Hoodlum provides practical, fixer-led Film Production Services in Sierra Leone for international productions that need permits, local crew, location access, customs, drones, transport, security and full production support. Sierra Leone is a strong production environment for documentary, factual television, NGO, development, environmental, current affairs, commercial, branded, cultural and field-based productions, but it requires careful preparation around visas, film permits, crew accreditation, equipment clearance, local access and security.
Sierra Leone offers a varied filming base, from Freetown and its port areas to coastal communities, tropical beaches, rainforest environments, mountains, colonial architecture, mining regions, road corridors and rural interiors. These locations can deliver strong production value, but they are not all accessed in the same way. A production working in central Freetown will have different requirements from a crew filming in rural communities, sensitive institutional spaces, private properties, marine locations or remote field areas.
For international crews, Sierra Leone works best when the production is properly structured before arrival. Film permits are typically issued by the Sierra Leone National Film Commission, crew accreditation may involve the National Film Commission or the Ministry of Tourism and Cultural Affairs, drone permissions sit with the Sierra Leone Civil Aviation Authority, and customs clearance for film equipment is handled through the National Revenue Authority. These approval routes need to be coordinated with the crew’s visa documentation, itinerary, equipment list, insurance and local fixer plan.
Hoodlum supports productions in Sierra Leone by managing the operational details that keep shoots moving: visa preparation, film permit guidance, crew accreditation, local fixer services, private location negotiation, drone permit coordination, customs planning, transport, accommodation, local crew sourcing, security and field logistics. Sierra Leone can be an effective filming location for well-prepared crews, but the country rewards early planning and local coordination.
Sierra Leone is well suited to productions that need West African access with a coastal, urban, rural and field-based production mix. The country can support documentary and factual stories around development, conservation, health, education, mining, maritime life, community resilience, heritage, social change, culture, sport, humanitarian work and commercial narratives. It is especially useful for productions that need real locations and contributor access rather than controlled studio environments.
Freetown gives productions an urban base with port access, administrative support, hotels, local suppliers, government liaison and practical transport links. The Western Area Peninsula provides coastal and community filming opportunities within reach of the capital, while regional centres such as Bo, Kenema and Makeni may be relevant for productions moving into the interior. Coastal routes, rural roads, forested areas, mountain regions and colonial-era settings all create a broad visual range for crews.
The country’s value for production sits in its combination of human access and location variety. A Sierra Leone shoot may include interviews in Freetown, observational scenes in community spaces, field visits to rural projects, coastal filming, road-based travel, institutional access, drone establishing shots and private location work. Each element needs to be matched with the correct approvals and logistics.
Hoodlum helps producers understand what is realistic in Sierra Leone before the crew arrives. We help assess the permit path, location access, equipment needs, travel schedule, health and safety requirements, security profile and available local support. This allows the creative plan to be built around the country’s actual production conditions rather than assumptions.
Freetown is usually the main production base for international crews filming in Sierra Leone. It is the most practical starting point for crew arrivals, visa checks, local coordinator meetings, permit follow-up, accreditation, customs planning, supplier sourcing, security briefings, accommodation and transport allocation. For many productions, Freetown is where the shoot becomes operational.
The city can support interviews, office filming, port-related sequences, urban street filming, controlled commercial spaces, institutional access, hotel-based production work and contributor coordination. It also provides access to local fixers, drivers, production assistants, translators, security contacts and administrative support. Productions working beyond the capital often still need Freetown as the centre for logistics and approvals.
Filming in Freetown should be planned with permit visibility and local liaison in mind. Even with national approvals, public filming, government-related locations, roads, markets, ports and sensitive environments may require additional coordination. Crews should carry copies of their film permit, crew accreditation, passports, visa documentation and local contact details while filming.
Transport in Freetown should also be organised through trusted local support. Traffic, equipment movement, loading areas, parking, security and public visibility can all affect a filming day. Hoodlum helps productions manage Freetown as a functioning base, not just a first stop before regional filming.
The Western Area Peninsula can be valuable for productions needing coastal visuals, community access, environmental stories, tourism-sector content, marine scenes or locations that combine proximity to Freetown with a different production texture. Coastal filming in Sierra Leone can be visually strong, but it requires planning around weather, tides, road access, location permissions and equipment protection.
Marine and coastal work may involve private property owners, community representatives, local authorities, boat operators, environmental considerations and contributor permissions. A beach or waterfront location may appear straightforward, but crews still need to know who controls access and whether additional permissions are required.
Equipment planning is important in coastal conditions. Humidity, salt air, sand, heat and rain can affect cameras, lenses, drones, sound gear, batteries and data systems. Productions should prepare protective cases, charging plans, backup media and secure storage. Drone filming may be useful for coastal sequences, but it requires approval from the Sierra Leone Civil Aviation Authority and should be coordinated in advance.
Hoodlum supports coastal shoots with location research, access negotiation, local fixer support, transport planning, drone coordination, equipment protection advice and security-aware movement. Sierra Leone’s coastline can work well for production when practical details are managed before the crew is standing on location.
Regional filming in Sierra Leone can support NGO, development, mining, agriculture, education, conservation, health, community and observational documentary work. Bo, Kenema, Makeni and surrounding districts may be relevant depending on the story and contributors. These areas can provide strong field-production value, but they require realistic travel planning and local coordination.
Movement outside Freetown should be carefully scheduled. Road conditions, weather, vehicle reliability, fuel, communications, security and accommodation can all affect a regional shoot. Productions should build in buffer time and avoid designing a schedule that assumes every road movement will be fast or predictable.
Local access is also important. Rural filming may require coordination with community leaders, local authorities, project partners, private landowners, NGOs, schools, clinics, businesses or families. A fixer helps identify the correct access point, explain the production, arrange permissions, manage expectations and avoid misunderstandings around filming.
Security and medical planning should be reviewed before regional travel. Sierra Leone is workable for international crews, but productions should understand the local risk profile, transport requirements and availability of medical facilities outside major centres. Hoodlum helps crews prepare route plans, accommodation, secure transport, local liaison and contingency options for regional filming.
Visitors to Sierra Leone typically require a valid passport, a visa and proof of yellow fever vaccination. Visas may be obtained on arrival or in advance from a Sierra Leonean embassy or consulate, depending on nationality, travel plans and the current entry process. Film crews should confirm the correct visa route before travel and ensure that all production documentation aligns with their itinerary.
Film crews applying for a visa to enter Sierra Leone typically require a valid passport, completed visa application form, invitation letter, proof of yellow fever vaccination and a detailed itinerary. Production-related documentation may also be required, including a script, location permits and equipment lists. These documents help establish the purpose of travel and connect the visa application to the filming activity.
The processing time for a film crew visa in Sierra Leone can take between 2 and 10 working days, depending on the type of visa, nationality and whether express processing is requested. Productions with multiple crew members should start the process early enough to manage differences in nationality and document requirements.
Visa costs for film crews in Sierra Leone can range from USD 100 to USD 500 per person, depending on visa type, duration of stay and nationality. Additional fees may apply for express processing, equipment permits and other services.
Hoodlum supports productions by helping organise invitation letters, itineraries, crew lists, equipment information and permit-related documentation so that visa applications are aligned with the wider filming plan.
Crew accreditation in Sierra Leone typically requires a letter of introduction from the production company, a copy of the film permit and identification documents such as passports and national ID cards. These materials are submitted to the relevant authorities, which may include the Sierra Leone National Film Commission or the Ministry of Tourism and Cultural Affairs.
To apply for crew accreditation, productions typically need a letter of introduction from the production company, a copy of the film permit, passports, national ID cards, proof of professional certification or qualification, and a detailed crew list with names, roles and contact information. This documentation helps authorities understand who is working on the project and how the crew will operate in the country.
Crew accreditation in Sierra Leone typically takes 2 to 5 working days to process. It can take longer if additional documentation is required or if the application is submitted during a peak period. Productions should avoid treating accreditation as a last-minute step, especially if the shoot involves public locations, government access, drones, multiple regions or large crews.
The cost of crew accreditation in Sierra Leone typically ranges from USD 50 to USD 200 per person, depending on the type of accreditation, duration of stay and other factors. Additional fees may apply for expedited processing or other services.
Hoodlum helps productions prepare accreditation materials, keep crew records organised and ensure that the accreditation process supports the film permit, visa application and local production plan. This reduces the risk of document gaps once the crew is on the ground.
Film permits in Sierra Leone are typically issued by the Sierra Leone National Film Commission, which is responsible for regulating and facilitating film production in the country. International productions should plan for formal permit approval before filming, especially for professional documentary, factual, commercial, television, branded, NGO or broadcast work.
A film permit application in Sierra Leone typically requires a completed application form, production schedule, script, list of crew and cast members, equipment list, proof of liability insurance and a letter of intent from the production company. Depending on the shoot, additional location permits, local authority permissions or project documentation may also be needed.
Film permits in Sierra Leone typically take 5 to 14 working days to process. Processing can take longer if additional documentation is required or if the application is submitted during a busy period. Productions involving sensitive locations, public filming, drones, large equipment packages, government-related sites or regional movement should allow additional time.
The cost of a film permit in Sierra Leone typically ranges from USD 500 to USD 2,000, depending on the production type, location and duration of filming. Additional fees may apply for administrative costs, location permits and other services.
Hoodlum supports film permit applications by helping prepare the production file, align documents, coordinate local submissions and advise on timing. A strong permit application should match the actual filming plan, including locations, dates, crew members, equipment and production purpose.
Private location access in Sierra Leone is typically arranged through direct negotiation with location owners or managers. A fixer is usually involved in securing private film locations by negotiating terms, obtaining necessary permissions and making sure the logistical and administrative arrangements are in place before the crew arrives.
Private location costs in Sierra Leone are usually provided on a case-by-case basis. Location owners or managers often require a production bio before quoting a fee. This may include details about the project, production company, filming purpose, crew size, shoot duration, equipment footprint and intended use of the footage.
A private location agreement should cover more than the location fee. It should also clarify filming hours, access points, parking, power, sound limitations, security, privacy, crew behaviour, property protection and wrap-out requirements. These details are especially important when filming in homes, hotels, offices, historic properties, commercial spaces or sensitive community settings.
Hoodlum’s local fixer support helps productions approach private locations professionally. We help identify the right contact, explain the project, negotiate access, confirm permissions and coordinate the practical requirements that allow the filming day to run smoothly.
Public filming in Sierra Leone should be handled carefully, particularly in busy urban areas, markets, ports, roads, government-adjacent spaces, transport hubs, beaches and community locations. A national film permit may not always be the only approval needed. Productions may also need local authority permission, site-specific access, contributor consent or municipal coordination.
Crews should carry copies of film permits, accreditation, passports, local contact details and insurance information while filming. This helps demonstrate legitimacy if questioned by officials, police, location managers or local representatives. In Sierra Leone, documentation can prevent delays and reduce uncertainty around the purpose of the shoot.
Local fixers are important for managing public filming. They can explain the production, speak with community representatives, advise on sensitive areas, manage crowd attention, help control access and coordinate with local authorities if needed. This is particularly useful when filming with visible equipment or foreign crew members.
Hoodlum supports public filming by helping productions identify approval routes, prepare documents, plan locations and manage the crew’s presence on the ground. The aim is to keep filming controlled, respectful and compliant.
Drone operations in Sierra Leone require advance permission from the Sierra Leone Civil Aviation Authority. Operators must comply with local rules regarding airspace, altitude, proximity to people and sensitive areas. Productions should not assume that drone filming can be arranged informally after arrival.
To apply for a drone permit in Sierra Leone, applicants typically need a completed application form, proof of drone registration, proof of liability insurance, a copy of the drone operator’s licence and a detailed flight plan. The flight plan should identify where the drone will fly, when operations will take place, who will operate the drone and how safety will be managed.
Drone permits in Sierra Leone typically take 7 to 14 working days to process from the date of submission of the completed application and required documents. The cost is typically around USD 200 to USD 500, although this may vary depending on the type of permit, duration of flight operations and other factors.
Drone flights should also be coordinated with location permissions, public filming approvals and security planning. Coastal, urban, port, government, telecommunications or sensitive areas may require additional caution. Weather, wind, humidity and visibility should be considered when planning drone operations.
Hoodlum supports drone coordination by helping productions prepare the permit materials, align drone activity with the shoot schedule and assess whether local drone support may be more practical than importing equipment and pilot capability from abroad.
Drone importation into Sierra Leone requires careful coordination. Importers may need permits from the Sierra Leone Customs Service and telecommunications authority approvals linked to frequency use. Relevant telecommunications approval may be required through the National Telecommunications Authority or National Telecommunications Commission, and productions should confirm the current approval route before importing a drone.
Drone importation documents typically include a commercial invoice, bill of lading, certificate of origin, proof of payment of customs duty, permit from the telecommunications authority and a clearance certificate from the Sierra Leone Civil Aviation Authority. These documents should align with the equipment list, drone permit and customs declaration.
Productions should plan drone importation early, particularly if the drone is part of a larger equipment shipment. Batteries, serial numbers, values, technical specifications and intended use should be clearly documented. Crews should also consider whether using a local drone operator would reduce customs and approval complexity.
Hoodlum helps productions assess the best route for drone filming in Sierra Leone, including whether to import a drone, use local capability or adjust the creative plan around approval timing and operational limits.
Sierra Leone is not a Carnet country. This means productions cannot rely on an ATA Carnet for temporary importation of film equipment. Instead, the process typically involves obtaining a temporary import permit, paying a customs bond or deposit and completing a customs declaration form. This allows professional equipment to enter the country temporarily for a specific period.
At customs in Sierra Leone, film crew members are typically required to present a valid passport, completed customs declaration form, temporary import permit, commercial invoice for equipment and a letter of introduction from the production company or local film commission. A detailed equipment list should include descriptions, serial numbers and values for cameras, lenses, sound gear, lighting, drones, batteries and specialist equipment.
Customs clearance is handled by the National Revenue Authority, which is responsible for clearance of goods entering the country, including professional film equipment. The processing time for customs clearance is typically around 3 to 5 working days, but can take up to 7 to 10 working days in some cases depending on the shipment’s complexity and the accuracy of the documentation.
Customs clearance costs in Sierra Leone typically range from 5% to 15% of the total value of the goods, plus a processing fee of around USD 100 to USD 300. Costs can vary depending on the type and value of equipment. Productions should budget for customs costs, possible deposits and clearance time.
Hoodlum supports customs planning by helping prepare the equipment list, coordinate with local contacts and align the temporary import process with the filming schedule. In Sierra Leone, customs clearance should be treated as a pre-production priority, especially for crews travelling with high-value equipment or drones.
Local fixers are essential for international productions in Sierra Leone. A fixer may support permit follow-up, crew accreditation, location access, private owner negotiations, contributor coordination, transport, accommodation, customs support, drone planning, security liaison and daily problem-solving.
Sierra Leone productions often require a flexible local team. The crew may need to move between Freetown, coastal areas and regional locations, each with different access requirements. A local fixer helps the production understand which permissions are required, who should be approached, how long movement will take and where security or logistical issues may arise.
Local crew sourcing depends on the scale and format of the shoot. Some productions may bring specialist camera, sound or directing crew while sourcing fixers, drivers, production assistants, translators, local producers and security support in Sierra Leone. Other productions may need a more substantial local production unit to manage multiple contributors or locations.
Hoodlum helps build the right production structure for each project. We support the local coordination that keeps the shoot compliant, efficient and responsive to field conditions.
Transport planning in Sierra Leone should account for road conditions, traffic, weather, regional travel times, vehicle reliability and security. Productions may need vetted drivers, suitable vehicles, backup transport, fuel planning and careful route selection, particularly when moving outside Freetown.
Accommodation should be selected around the production’s route, security needs and equipment storage requirements. Freetown can support more established crew accommodation, while regional locations may require more planning around standards, power, connectivity, food, water and vehicle access.
Field logistics should also include communications, data backup, charging, weather cover, medical planning and contingency time. Humidity and rain can affect equipment, while regional movement can affect call times and contributor availability. Productions should build realistic daily plans rather than relying on tight travel assumptions.
Hoodlum supports transport, accommodation and field logistics so that crews can move efficiently and safely. Our role is to connect the schedule to the actual conditions on the ground.
Sierra Leone offers a workable production environment, but infrastructure and logistics can be challenging. Careful planning and local expertise are essential. For film productions, it is recommended to hire a reputable and experienced local security company that can provide armed and unarmed guards, as well as risk assessment and management services.
Security planning should protect the crew, equipment and locations. The required level of security will depend on the production footprint, visibility, equipment value, travel route, filming subject and location type. A small controlled interview may require a lighter approach than a multi-location field shoot with visible equipment.
Crews should plan secure transport, equipment storage, route management and emergency procedures. For public filming, local fixers and security support can help manage attention, reduce disruption and coordinate with authorities where needed.
Hoodlum helps productions assess the security requirements for each location and match the support level to the shoot. Security in Sierra Leone should be practical and proportionate, with a clear focus on protecting crew movement, equipment and filming access.
Proof of yellow fever vaccination is typically required for visitors entering Sierra Leone. Film crews should ensure all travellers have the correct vaccination documentation before departure. This should be checked alongside visas, passports, insurance and itinerary planning.
Productions should also seek professional travel health advice before filming in Sierra Leone. Depending on duration, locations and season, crews may need malaria prevention, insect protection, medical kits, hydration planning, heat management and contingency plans for illness or injury.
Medical access may vary outside Freetown and major centres, so regional filming should include emergency planning. Productions should know where medical support is available, how the crew will communicate in an emergency and what evacuation options exist if needed.
Hoodlum helps integrate health planning into the production schedule, transport plan and accommodation decisions. Health preparation is not separate from logistics; it directly affects the crew’s ability to keep filming.
Sierra Leone does not currently offer a film rebate or tax incentive programme for film productions. Producers should not budget around a local rebate when planning a Sierra Leone shoot.
Instead, production value in Sierra Leone should be assessed through access, locations, local crew, story relevance, cost planning and logistics efficiency. Budget planning should focus on permits, accreditation, visas, customs clearance, local fixers, transport, accommodation, security, drone approvals, private locations and contingency time.
Hoodlum helps productions build realistic Sierra Leone budgets based on operational needs rather than assumed incentives. This allows producers to understand the true cost of filming before committing crew and equipment.
Sierra Leone is the right production choice when a project needs credible West African access, coastal locations, Freetown-based interviews, NGO or development settings, environmental stories, community access, mining or infrastructure context, rural fieldwork, colonial architecture or documentary texture.
The country suits productions that can plan approvals and logistics properly. Visas, film permits, accreditation, drone permissions and equipment customs clearance all need attention. A successful Sierra Leone shoot usually depends on local coordination before and during filming.
Sierra Leone is less suitable for productions that need very fast, low-admin access with significant imported equipment and no lead time. Because the country is not a Carnet country, customs clearance requires planning. Drone importation and drone permits also need time and documentation.
Hoodlum helps producers decide whether Sierra Leone fits the creative, schedule, budget and risk profile of the shoot. When the project is viable, we provide the local production support needed to make it work.
A common mistake is assuming that visa on arrival removes the need for production paperwork. Film crews still need supporting documentation such as invitation letters, itineraries, film project documents, location permits and equipment lists.
Another mistake is underestimating film permit timing. Sierra Leone film permits typically take 5 to 14 working days, and delays can occur if documents are incomplete or if additional permissions are needed.
Productions also sometimes forget that Sierra Leone is not a Carnet country. Temporary importation requires customs declaration, temporary import permits, possible bonds or deposits and proper equipment documentation. Clearance can take 3 to 5 working days, or up to 7 to 10 working days in more complex cases.
Drone planning is another frequent issue. Drone permits from the Sierra Leone Civil Aviation Authority typically take 7 to 14 working days, and drone importation may require customs and telecommunications approvals.
Private locations should not be approached informally. Location owners often require a production bio before quoting fees, and a local fixer should help negotiate access, permissions and logistics.
Finally, productions sometimes underestimate infrastructure and security planning. Sierra Leone can work well for international crews, but transport, accommodation, medical access, security and contingency planning should be built into the schedule.
Hoodlum supports productions in Sierra Leone with practical, fixer-led production services for international crews. We help coordinate the permissions, local relationships and field logistics that make filming possible.
Our support includes visa documentation, invitation letters, film permit guidance, crew accreditation, local fixer services, private location negotiation, drone permit coordination, drone importation advice, customs clearance planning, local crew sourcing, transport, accommodation, security and field logistics.
We support productions from early planning through the shoot itself. During pre-production, we help assess locations, timelines, permit needs, customs requirements and crew structure. On the ground, we coordinate local liaison, drivers, fixers, contributors, location access, security and daily production movement.
Sierra Leone requires preparation, documentation and trusted local coordination. Hoodlum provides the support needed to keep international crews compliant, mobile and focused on filming.
Yes. Visitors to Sierra Leone typically require a valid passport, visa and proof of yellow fever vaccination. Visas may be obtained on arrival or in advance, depending on nationality and current requirements.
Film crews typically need a valid passport, completed visa application form, invitation letter, proof of yellow fever vaccination, detailed itinerary and film project documentation such as script, location permits and equipment lists.
A film crew visa can take 2 to 10 working days depending on visa type, nationality and whether express processing is requested.
Film permits are typically issued by the Sierra Leone National Film Commission.
Film permits in Sierra Leone typically take 5 to 14 working days to process, though they can take longer if additional documentation is required.
A film permit application typically requires a completed application form, production schedule, script, crew and cast list, equipment list, proof of liability insurance and a letter of intent from the production company.
Yes. Crew accreditation may be required and typically involves a letter of introduction, copy of the film permit, passports, national ID cards, proof of certification and a detailed crew list.
Yes, but drone operators must obtain a permit from the Sierra Leone Civil Aviation Authority before flying.
Drone permits typically take 7 to 14 working days from submission of the completed application and required documents.
No. Sierra Leone is not a Carnet country. Film equipment must be temporarily imported through customs using the required declarations and permits.
Customs clearance is handled by the National Revenue Authority.
No. Sierra Leone does not currently offer a film rebate or tax incentive programme for film productions.
Yes. It is recommended to hire a reputable local security company that can provide armed or unarmed guards, risk assessment and management services depending on the shoot.
Contact Hoodlum today for expert Film Production Services in Sierra Leone, including fixer support, film permits, crew sourcing, drone permissions, customs clearance, location access and complete on-the-ground production management. For more information, visit the Hoodlum Film Fixers Sierra Leone Google Business Profile.