Jane walks home alone at night.

As the journey progresses we realise where the real danger lies

Get Home Safe

8 minutes / Psychological thriller / 2024

Festivals and Awards

  • Sue Blainey Award for Best Female Storyteller: Bass Coast Shorts — Phillip Island, Australia

  • Highly Commended: Canberra Short Film Festival — Canberra, Australia

  • Best West Finalist: Setting Sun Film Festival — Melbourne, Australia

  • Monster Fest — Melbourne, Australia

A woman with dark hair styled in a bun, wearing a beige jacket and gray sweater, holding a smartphone, with earphones in, walking in a dimly lit environment.

With this film we wanted to provoke viewers into judging Jane and her behaviour and then completely subvert their understanding of where the danger lies for her. The ending isn’t just a gut punch but a twist of the knife. It’s unpleasant but the reality is it’s happening in this country every single day and something needs to change

- Karla Hillam

A woman with dark hair tied up in a bun, wearing a tan trench coat, standing outdoors at dusk and looking at her phone.
A house with a tiled roof, lit from inside, taken at dusk or night. The house has a porch with white columns, a front door, a window, and a white picket fence surrounding it. There are trees and bushes outside.
Nighttime scene under an overpass with a group of people standing and sitting. There are signs indicating a pedestrian and bicycle pathway, and a small fenced area in the foreground.