Project Detail

Take me Home

Synopsis

Take me Home is an innovative and exhilarating exploration into the bizarre and unsettling behaviour of a vulnerable specimen who streaks seamlessly through spaces and atmospheres propelled by a startling array of compelling animation techniques.

Details

Year
1999
Type of film
Shorts
Running time
6 mins 30 secs
Format
16mm
Director
Matt Hulse
Producer
Arts Council of England
Executive Producer
Arts Council of England
Director of Photography
Matt Hulse
Principal cast
Matt Hulse, Whoo-Hoo The Bear
Film Stock
Kodak

Categories

Production Status

Production Company

FFF 32 Buckingham Street, Brighton BN1 3LT Tel: 01273 748134 Email: unconsoled@hotmail.com

Sales Company

LFMC The Lux Centre, 2-4 Hoxton Square, London N1 6NU Tel: 020 7684 0202 Fax: 020 7684 2222

Page updates

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See also

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Sound for the Future Sound for the Future

Director: Matt Hulse

Year: 2020

The Hippies were a bizarre English punk band formed in '79 by the Hulse children, Toby (12), Matt (11) and Polly (8). Their cassette album 'A Sound for the Future' featured songs about disease, assassination and the Antarctic.<br /> "Stop eating toast and singeing your legs by the gas fire. Get up and do something!" (Ruth Pendragon, Mother, Manager, Guru), 1979. The Hippies performed ticketed live shows for their mother’s kindly but chaotic group of Cambridge friends; the homeless, drunks, animal rights activists, junkies, cross-dressers and gay Franciscan friars.<br /> <br /> The Hippies then and now. What truly happened back in the past and whose side of the story should be told? Especially as the film’s director was the band's 11-year-old drummer? Matt’s mum Ruth, maverick, mystic, manager, plays a pivotal role in the bigger picture, offering an insight into a time of personal and social upheaval, both for her and her family in Thatcher’s Britain.<br /> <br /> Using music of the period, archive, animation and poetic reimaginings of key moments, Matt Hulse explores a part-remembered, kaleidoscopically fractured, family history, through an energetic, jarring, ride; part performance, part art, part process, post-punk.

The Plot The Plot

Director: Matt Hulse

Year: 2004

Home is no longer sweet. Estate is no longer real.<br />  <br /> The Plot is an enigmatic and ground-breaking collaboration between a film-maker, a 3-D digital animator and a web design team. Created entirely in the digital domain (Lightwave 3-D and internet), The Plot toys provocatively with the conventions of film and cinema, raising questions about the links between substance, meaning and entertainment.

Hotel Central Hotel Central

Director: Matt Hulse

Year: 2001

Hovering in mood somewhere between M Hulot's Holiday and The Exorcist this eccentric film does not attempt to narrate a dream, though it exploits the same kind of mechanisms that dreams utilise. Hold on to your hats.