Online Book Reader

Home Category

London (Fodor's 2012) - Fodor's [214]

By Root 1356 0
is a fascinating look at the daily life of Londoners in the 18th century. Nineteenth-century London—the city of Queen Victoria, Tennyson, and Dickens—comes alive through Mayhew’s London, a massive study of the London poor by Henry Mayhew, and Gustave Doré’s London, an unforgettable series of engravings of the city (often reprinted in modern editions) that detail its horrifying slums and grand avenues. When it comes to fiction, of course, Dickens’s immortal works top the list. Stay-at-home detectives have long walked the streets of London, thanks to great mysteries by Dorothy L. Sayers, Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh, and Antonia Fraser. Cops and bad guys wind their way around 1960s London in Jake Arnott’s pulp fiction books, The Long Firm and He Kills Coppers. Martin Amis’s London Fields tracks a murder mystery through West London. For so-called “tart noir,” pick up any Stella Duffy book. Marie Belloc-Lowndes’s The Lodger is a fictional account of London’s most deadly villain, Jack the Ripper. Victorian London was never so salacious as in Sarah Waters’s story of a young girl who travels the theaters as a singer, the Soho squares as a male prostitute, and the East End as a communist in Tipping the Velvet. Late-20th-century London, with its diverse ethnic makeup, is the star of Zadie Smith’s famed novel White Teeth. The vibrancy and cultural diversity of London’s East End come to life in Monica Ali’s Brick Lane.

Many films—from Waterloo Bridge and Georgy Girl to Secrets and Lies and Notting Hill—have used London as their setting. The great musicals Walt Disney’s Mary Poppins, George Cukor’s My Fair Lady, and Sir Carol Reed’s Oliver! evoke the Hollywood soundstage version of London.

Children of all ages enjoy Stephen Herek’s 101 Dalmatians, with Glenn Close as fashion-savvy Cruella de Vil. King’s Cross Station in London was shot to cinematic fame by the movie version of J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. Look for cameos by the city in all other Harry Potter films.

The swinging ’60s are loosely portrayed in M. Jay Roach’s Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, full of references to British slang and some great opening scenes in London. For a truer picture of the ’60s in London, Michelangelo Antonioni weaves a mystery plot around the world of a London fashion photographer in Blow-Up. British gangster films came into their own with Guy Ritchie’s amusing tales of London thieves in Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels, filmed almost entirely in London, and the follow-up Snatch. More sobering portraits of London criminal life include Neil Jordan’s Mona Lisa, Paul McGuigan’s Gangster No. 1, and John Mackenzie’s The Long Good Friday. Of course, the original tough guy is 007, and his best exploits in London are featured in the introductory chase scene in The World Is Not Enough.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle knew the potential of London as a chilling setting, and John Landis’s An American Werewolf in London and Hitchcock’s 39 Steps and The Man Who Knew Too Much exploit the Gothic and sinister qualities of the city. For a fascinating look at Renaissance London, watch John Madden’s Shakespeare in Love. Dickens’s London is indelibly depicted in David Lean’s Oliver Twist.

Some modern-day romantic comedies that use London as a backdrop are Peter Howitt’s Sliding Doors with Gwyneth Paltrow and the screen adaptations of Helen Fielding’s Bridget Jones’s Diary (and its sequel), starring Renée Zellweger, Hugh Grant, and Colin Firth. Glossy London is depicted in Woody Allen’s Match Point, bohemian London in David Kane’s This Year’s Love, gritty London in Shane Meadow’s Somers Town, and post-zombie London in Danny Boyle’s 28 Days Later, while Patrick Kellior’s London offers a uniquely informed, idiosyncratic view of the city.

Previous Chapter | Beginning of Chapter | Next Chapter | Table of Contents

Main Table of Contents

Getting Here and Around

Essentials

Previous Chapter | Next Chapter | Table of Contents

Air Travel | Bus Travel | Car Travel | Underground Travel | Taxi | DLR: Docklands Light Railway | River

Return Main Page Previous Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader