Claire Monk
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‘Where I come from, we eat places like this for breakfast’
Aki Kaurismäki’s I Hired a Contract Killer as transnational representation of local London
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This chapter argues Aki Kaurismäki’s I Hired a Contract Killer (1990) clearly exploits the dramatic qualities of transitional, marginal territories in East London in particular. Kaurismäki’s film marks East London as a strange, contemporary Gothic space; a doom-laden, wild and desolate urban landscape on the verge of renewal and, as we now know, eventual gentrification. The film depicts the eastern side of the city of London on the threshold of change, lurching from post-industrial slumber towards the embrace of a global economy, but also still replete with mythology. The film uses this dense and complex space to tell a story about place and displacement; about liminality or ‘betwixt-and-betweeness’; about the thresholds of urban space, urban experience and urban identity. It exploits contemporary anxieties concerning the breakdown of individual and national spatial boundaries as it explores the problematic relationships that might come to exist between rootless individuals located within post-industrial urban societies and their immediate material environments. The chapter demonstrates how John Ebden’s production design exploits the mythical and enduring idea of the East End of London as a discursive territory. The film seems to suggest that ‘outcast’ East London is finding it hard to shake its image of danger, decadence and decay, even in a period of economic and sociocultural transition and (post)modernisation in an increasingly global world.

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Global London on screen

Visitors, cosmopolitans and migratory cinematic visions of a superdiverse city

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