This exhibition has now ended after an extension into late June 2021. Thank you from all of us at the HH to everyone who came down, and for all your kind comments. Let us know if you’d like to see the costumes elsewhere - we’d love this exhibition to travel so that more people can see it, and we’re always interested in getting out of London!
Hackers director Iain Softley visiting the exhibition in June 2021
Due to social distancing measures we ask that you book a time to visit this exhibition. However if you are in the area and wish to drop by without having booked in advance please phone ahead to check availability: +44 (0)207 833 3644
Open Mon – Sat, 12 - 6pm
*extended until 26th of June*
Back in the future of 1995, the teen techno-thriller Hackers (dir. Iain Softley) burst onto cinema screens with its cyber phreak aesthetics, video game visuals and mind-bending techno soundtrack. For many, it was the vibrancy of the cartoon-like, surreal costumes that gave the film its unique identity, cult status and era-defining quality that still resonates today.
Styled by costume designer Roger K. Burton, the film is credited with giving hacker culture its cool credentials and reinterpreting cyberpunk by taking in influences from countless mid 90s style tribes: street punk, techno, surf, skateboard, grunge, drag, rave, fetish and exotic club culture scenes. A plethora of fashion labels make an appearance - Adidas, Animal, Black Flys, Casio, Christopher Nemeth, Dope, Dr Martens, Fuct, La Rocka, Michiko Koshino, Nike, Oakley, Quicksilver and Vivienne Westwood - crashing into a glorious fusion of high-techno style.
The wardrobe was worn with attitude by a young virtually unknown cast including Angelina Jolie in her first major role and her future ex-husband Jonny Lee Miller. The casts’ eclectic outfits have been variously described as “medieval-mixed-with-athletic-wear”, “part Saved By the Bell, part Daryl Hannah in Blade Runner, part Sex Queen from a hair metal video”. Burton’s cinematic references for the wardrobe however, were cult movies like The Warriors (1979), Escape From New York (1981), Liquid Sky (1982), and Paris is Burning (1990). The film is brimming with subtle nods to a host of other subcultural artefacts such as counter-culture magazines Details, Paper, Juxtapoz, Thrasher, Wired and Ray Gun, the band Deee-Lite and the Wigstock drag festival, among many others.
For the first time since the movie’s release twenty-five years ago, sci-fi fans and fashion geeks can get close and personal to a display of the main cast’s costumes, accessories and Rollerblades. Also included in the exhibition are the original mood boards for each character, key on-set costume books containing all the character Polaroids in their outfits - scene by scene, and rarest of all, photos from the fittings, including some of the outfits that didn’t make the final cut.
“As we were filming on the streets of New York and London, I don’t think that any of us imagined for one minute that Hackers would become such a much-loved cult movie. Amazingly, I still regularly receive emails from fans fascinated with the costumes 25 years after it was released.” - Roger K Burton, Costume Designer.
The exhibition will be on display from Thursday 3rd of December 2020 at London’s longest running underground gallery the Horse Hospital, the place where the costumes were originally conceived and have been stored since.
Open Mon – Sat 12-6pm
Suggested donation: £4-£6. No one will be turned away for lack of funds.
All proceeds go to the Save The Horse Hospital fighting fund.
Due to social distancing measures we ask that you book a time to visit this exhibition.*
To book a visit slot please click below and fill out our short booking form:
*If you are in the area and wish to drop by without having booked in advance please phone ahead to check availability: +44 (0)207 833 3644