Future PerfectA time capsule from the end of the world
![A child's drawing of their parents sits on a table in a scene from FUTURE PERFECT](/media/W1siZiIsIjIwMjMvMTEvMjQvNHZ6dml5Y202dF9GdXR1cmVQZXJmZWN0X1dlYi5qcGciXSxbInAiLCJ0aHVtYiIsIjcwNHg0MDAjIl1d/d6ce864de57e680b/FuturePerfect-Web.jpg)
![A child's drawing of their parents sits on a table in a scene from FUTURE PERFECT](/media/W1siZiIsIjIwMjMvMTEvMjQvNHZ6dml5Y202dF9GdXR1cmVQZXJmZWN0X1dlYi5qcGciXSxbInAiLCJ0aHVtYiIsIjEyMDB4NDAwIyJdXQ/b94a6e1dbe7c9e73/FuturePerfect-Web.jpg)
A child draws a picture of his parents, and the illustration takes prime spot on the kitchen corkboard. After a while, the picture is taken down and buried as part of a family time capsule. Forgotten, the time capsule lies dormant for eons - until, in a distant future long after the end of humanity, the drawing is excavated by an alien species.
Over the course of its 5-minute runtime, Future Perfect offers audiences a mundane portrait of family life, a morbid documentation of the decline of civilisation and a disturbing glimpse of what might come next.
Sean Mckenna skilfully repackages high-concept science fiction for the short film format - thanks to a simple, effective narrative conceit, satisfying practical effects and a deadpan narration from Julian Barratt (The Mighty Boosh).
Watch now
Festival selections include: Encounters Film Festival, British Shorts Berlin, Aestethica Short Film Festival, Reykjavik Film Festival.
Selected by leading shorts platform Short of the Week.