I've been told many times that I have no control when it comes to good design. Whether it's a crappy toothpaste in an awesome box, or ikea furniture, I have to have it. So this here blog is going to save me a lot of money... Stay tuned, I'll be sharing everything from design, music, food, travel, to a lot of other things I wish I could buy. But instead of going broke, I'll be sharing the so called wealth: mostly good design and a pinch of my ramblings.
Having been struck by a 150-ton meteorite, Henry has to adapt to living precisely ninety-one centimeters from himself.
An animated short that runs for only 13 minutes, this tells the rather comical and yet sad story of a man affected by a meteorite in a most peculiar way. Once he has been struck he finds that his body is now constantly 91 centimetres from where it should be. To open a door, sit down, answer his telephone, etc, he has to perform all of the actions exactly 91 centimetres away from where he normally would, laws of physics having taken a long walk off a short pier.
With a warm, wonderfully rendered style and a mixture of great detail and enjoyably abstract moments, this little piece of animation is, quite frankly, an absolute joy. The bizarre central concept is brilliantly realised and handled so well that you never laugh AT the ridiculousness of the whole thing although you do get a chance to laugh ALONG with a number of great moments.
Writer-director-animator Jérémy Clapin is someone I hope continues to produce great work and go on to even bigger and better things. On the strength of the quality on display here, he most certainly deserves it. fromimdb
Won Kodak Short Film Award in Cannes Film Festival, 2008