Name Carl Hunter | Movies Grow Your Own, Unloveable | |
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Albums All Together Now - The Very Best of the Farm, Best of The Farm, Spartacus, The Very Best of The Farm Similar People Peter Hooton, Keith Mullin, Richard Laxton, Frank Cottrell Boyce, Joe Walker | ||
Music group The Farm (Since 1986) |
Carl Hunter on Sometimes Always Never at London Film Festival
Carl Hunter (born 22 April 1965, Liverpool, England) is an English director and screenwriter, who was the bassist in the Liverpool-based pop group The Farm.
Contents
- Carl Hunter on Sometimes Always Never at London Film Festival
- Carl Hunter At The Concert Pub Comedy Show
- Music career
- Film and Media Career
- References
Carl Hunter At The Concert Pub Comedy Show
Music career
In 1983, Hunter was part of the second wave of members who joined The Farm, and apart from his musical contributions, he also helped to design their CD jackets and sleeves. The band's 1991 album Spartacus reached number 1 in the UK albums chart. Three singles from the band reached the UK Top 10 Singles Chart; 1990's Groovy Train and All Together Now, as well as the 2004 remix of All Together Now.
Film and Media Career
After completing a Master's Degree in Multi Media Design and Production in 1995, Hunter went on to direct, produce and write a number of short films in the late 1990s, including Blood Sports for All: The Punk Kes and Birthday Boy.
Since the early 2000s, Hunter has worked closely with Frank Cottrell Boyce (writer of Millions and 24 Hour Party People). In 2007, they released the feature film Grow Your Own, a British comedy set on a Merseyside allotment. Hunter acted as a producer and co-writer on the film. Alongside this, he has continued to direct short films and documentaries for television and film festivals. In 2009, Hunter adapted the short story Accelerate, written by Cottrell Boyce for The Reader, into a short online film.
In 2011, Hunter worked as photographic illustrator on Cottrell Boyce's book 'The Unforgotten Coat', which won the 2012 Guardian Children's Fiction Prize and the 2012 Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis.
Carl Hunter is set to direct Triple Word Score, a feature film written by Cottrell Boyce that will be produced in Northwest England. In May 2016, it was announced that Bill Nighy had joined the cast.
Hunter currently teaches film production at Ormskirk's Edge Hill University.