Matthias Hoene is a London and LA based filmmaker. He began with animated music videos, then commercials and short films, before getting into feature films and episodes of television series. His film Cockneys vs Zombies (2012) won multiple awards, while The Warriors Gate (2016) was an international fantasy action epic produced by Europacorp. His latest film Little Bone Lodge (2023) was a psychological thriller with a horror twist.
A 2003 music video Hoene made for Tom McRae's song "A Day Like Today" had objects in a apartment symbolize evoking memories by coming to life and fading away. Later music videos Hoene directed include for "Rusty Pipes", by Eels in 2018, "Bismarck" by Sabaton in 2019, and "Me Because of You" and "Nevermind" by HRVY in 2020.
Hoene returned to commercials after his success with dramatic works. A 2012 advertisement he directed for AA plc pretends to be a horror film trailer, featuring a house under attack by a demonic Jack Frost, until an AA engineer appears to fix the family boiler. He reprised the zombies theme in the first television advertisement for British mobile telephone network Giffgaff, 3 minutes long, titled "#dontbescared" in 2013, about helpful zombies. Another horror-themed advertisement Hoene directed for Giffgaff, the 4-minute "Monster Family", in 2018, portrayed a girl removed from then returned to her monster family.
Hoene and two screenwriters, James Moran and Lucas Roche, spent a year and a half developing the screenplay that became the motion picture Cockneys vs Zombies in 2012. It is a comedy horror film pitting East End bank robbers and retirees against the living dead. Hoene had then been living in East London for three years, and made the film a love letter to the East End of London, showing many of the area's locations. It won best feature film at the 2012 San Sebastián Horror and Fantasy Film Festival, a "Méliès d'argent" at the Trieste Science+Fiction Festival, and best feature film, best comedy, and best ensemble cast at the 2012 Toronto After Dark Film Festival.
In 2016 Hoene directed Luc Besson's Chinese and French science fiction action-adventure film The Warriors Gate, written by Besson and Robert Mark Kamen. This was Hoene's biggest work yet, with up to 900 people on set at a time, filmed in China and Canada, though with all the dialogue in English.
In 2018, Hoene was one of five prominent European filmmakers who made short films for the campaign #EUandME, about the benefits of the European Union, that were aired across the continent; his entry, "The Living Hostel", was about an elderly lady's grandchildren trying to realize her dream of travelling across Europe. It was his first German language film. The same year he also directed the three-minute documentary Dive, for the Adidas Parley environmental partnership, about Anna Bader cliff diving from Kahekili's Leap in Hawaii, while reflecting on plastic pollution.
In 2021, Hoene began filming Theodosia, a children's fantasy adventure television series based on the Theodosia and the Serpents of Chaos books by R. L. LaFevers. The series premiered on HBO Max in 2022, and was acquired by partners including the BBC. It was approved for a second season.
In 2023, Hoene directed Little Bone Lodge, also known as The Last Exit, a thriller film about two criminals in a home invasion in the Scottish Highlands meeting a family with its own secrets. Hoene said that he wanted to direct a straight character based thriller, unlike the action comedy and horror comedy that he had become known for. The film is rated 100% on Rotten Tomatoes. The writer, Neil Linpow, also acted in the film, with Joely Richardson and Sadie Soverall.
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