December 20, 2021 at 06:22AM
Some people have dealt with the last 18 months of the pandemic and lockdowns by partaking in simple pursuits such as binging every episode of Succession or embarking upon a couch-to-5k mission. But for British actress Hannah John-Kamen, the solution to COVID-19 angst was to kick zombies in the face.
âI shot two movies, Unwelcome with Douglas Booth (a horror which will be released next year) and Resident Evil,â the 32-year-old says while enveloped in the squishy cushions of a corner booth at Londonâs Shoreditch House. âI literally had one day between going out to Canada to isolate for two weeks to shoot Resident Evil. Weirdly, shooting a zombie movie during a pandemic made sense in a very odd, peculiar way. It was really good for the soul.â
The seventh installment of the video gameâinspired Resident Evil movie franchise, Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City, is indeed a curious case of art imitating life. It acts as a â90s-based prequel to the original hitâthe peak-noughties movies starring Milla Jovovichâfollowing Kaya Scodelarioâs Claire Redfield on her return to her hometown of Raccoon City, where she discovers a pharmaceutical experiment has gone wrong and caused an outbreak that has turned the population into zombies. The only chance of survival? Teaming up with John-Kamenâs Jill Valentine, a police officer who knows a thing or two about standing up for herself in a male-dominated world and is very comfortable toting a gunâa combined skill set that proves to be rather effective for dealing with the undead.Â
âSheâs a survivalist⌠How do I take that into my own life?â John-Kamen ponders as she nurses her latte. Sheâs bathed in autumn sun streaming in through the private members clubâs industrial windows. âOh my God, I love a zombie film,â she continues enthusiastically. âAnd I loved the [Resident Evil] games! I used to go over to my friend Adamâs place [to play them], and now, I get to play Jill Valentine!â
âI’m character driven and story driven in everything I do,â John-Kamen says, noting how fortunate she has been to notch up an IMDb profile page full of bold roles and huge franchisesâMarvel, Game of Thrones and Star Wars, to name a few. âAnd when I get given a script where itâs a badass, strong female character, Iâm not going to say no to that because that is something that empowers me, and I learn from playing those roles.â How do these experiences empower John-Kamen in her own life, though? âI know how to kick bum, literally, in my own life now! I actually know how to do Krav Maga,â she says.Â
John-Kamen grew up in the late â90s, which her new movie is a time capsule for. There are pagers and walkmans, Jennifer Paigeâs âCrushâ on the soundtrack and John-Kamenâs very â90s beauty look. She calls it her âMariah Carey hair.â Although, she also admits it has a little âJulia Roberts circa Pretty Womanâ seasoning, too. But being born in 1989 (same here), she gleaned her style influences whilst sitting at home watching noughties music videos on MTV and spending countless hours on MSN messenger using her alias âSweet Sugar,â which, as she attended an all-girls school, was her only access to boys. (Same again!)
The pinnacle of that eraâs influence on John-Kamen? âI was really loving Christina Aguilera in the year 2000. I was 10, and I actually was plucking my eyebrows to death,â she laughs. âThank God they grew back. I used to pluck them down to the bone! I look back at photos of me and my friends when weâre around 12 years old, and I have on my Miss Sixty jeans, Hooch bag, French Connection.â She, unfortunately, didnât complete the â00s wardrobe tick list by owning a Juicy Couture tracksuit. âMy mum wouldnât let me have one. She thought it was tacky. She said I was too young to have something written on my bum saying juicy. I guess I was only 11,â she says.Â
Raised on the rural outskirts of Hull by her Nigerian-born father Johnny, a forensic scientist, and her mother Astri, a Norwegian fashion model, John-Kamen holds another power akin to her kick-ass alter egos on-screen: a strength of character. âMy parents always said to me (and itâs been my biggest inspiration), âYou are your own thumbprint. You are your own identity. You are unique. Never try to be anyone else. Always be yourself from the ground up. Work hard, be who you are, be inspired by yourself and always learn,ââ she says.Â
For all the positives John-Kamen remembers from her formative years, it was still a difficult time for a mixed-race girl in the UK, with diversity in many towns and villages a rarity. âBeing the only mixed-race girl at school, I denied my curly hair,â she explains, wearing her long hair in a half-up, half-down style today. âI wanted to straighten it and conform so badly. I just wanted to fit in. Thereâs a lot of mixed-raced girls I speak to, and we all went through the same thing, a bit of an identity crisis. I was always looking to straighten my hair. I wanted to dye it blonde. I wanted to have blonde streaks. My beauty regime was trying to fit in and look like the blonde Christina Aguilera look, look like my Barbies and look essentially white. But actually now, itâs completely the opposite. Itâs about embracing everything that I am and naturally am. My school was an all-girl school, and I did fit in, but I didnât believe I did, which was sad. Times have really changed, and itâs beautiful to see my nephew and my niece going to school embracing their curls and braids.â
Although John-Kamen feels she didnât have âbad memories of being held backâ by others or âany racism,â she does recall holding herself back in the quest to âfit in,â and she says that microaggressionsâa term that wasnât commonly used at the timeâwere commonplace. âI could see that I was the only different-looking person [on the playground], and I didnât want everyone else to see that. It was like itâs my secret that Iâm not going to tell, and [I thought], âI hope they donât find out that Iâm actually mixed race.â Itâs a very bizarre way of thinking, but thatâs what I felt,â she says. I then ask her about the microaggressions she had to fight against. âIt was stuff like going into a shop and being told, âThe sales section is over there,â but they donât tell the white person about the sales,â she replies. âOr someone saying, âIâm not racist. I have a Black friend.â Iâve had it before where someone goes, âOh my God, can I touch your hair? Is your hair real?â I get a lot [of] âAre your eyes real?â When you go out to a party, you go out for dinner, you get commented on, and itâs a bit of a Josephine Baker moment where you go, âWhy are you looking, staring, pointing and prodding me like that because Iâm not doing it to you? No one else is doing that to anyone white in this room.ââ
With her age, experience and high profile, I wonder whether she feels more empowered to call people out now. âAbsolutely,â she says instantly. âI feel like itâs my duty. I will never stand by and let that happen and for people who arenât there yet who donât feel like they can.â The resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement last year also inspired John-Kamen: âWe were all forced to lock the f**k down, shut up and listen.â
Thereâs also something about hitting your 30s that encourages growth and reflection, and John-Kamen isnât immune to that. âI actually look back at my life and in certain moments of it and go, âWow, Hannah, how did you get yourself out of that?â I remember there was one [time] where I was working, working, working in my early 20s, and then I didnât work for a really long time. In my head, I was like, âOh no, I’m failing.â But actually, no, I wasnât,â she says. âI worked in a bar for a bit and was just a young girl in the big cityâjust living, surviving, making the wrong decisions and falling in love with the wrong people, which we have to do! Itâs a rightful passage of life! I lived in an apartment the size of this table in Archway.â She gestures over the marble table towards a location that may only be a 15-minute car journey away but is now worlds apart from this memory. âIt was above a kebab shop. The guys downstairs looked after me. I used their internet. They let me have free food because I was so skint, and I didnât want to tell my parents. I was so happy because the pressure of being a successful movie star wasnât in my head. I had the biggest parties as well with all these boys in my tiny, little room,â she adds, flexing the archetypal ambitious grit of a Virgo.
As our chatty hour draws to a close, I have to know about the look she is serving today. Consisting of leather trousers, industrial black boots and a bohemian cropped top, it conjures up another noughties icon. âI am channeling Coyote Ugly because I went to see it the other night at Rio Cinema in Dalston as part of the LGBTQ+ festival. There was drag. Iâll get a video up,â John-Kamen says, grabbing her phone excitedly. âIt got so rowdy. We were all singing along. This is my friend, Nicole.â She points at the video to a girl living her best early noughties fantasy. âWe all just started screaming to LeAnn Rimes. I forgot how stylish the girls were, so I just started getting my leather pants out again. Literally, I was on Instagram shopping going, âLeather pants, Coyote Ugly top, done!ââ she adds.
Waitâsheâs an Instagram shopper? âDo you know what? Because your phoneâs listening to you all the time, itâs a bit scary. It knows you more than you know yourself. I go on the shopping thing, and Iâll go, âOh my God, I love that. Thatâs so me. Iâm buying it, literally gasping.â Thank you, Google, for listening to me going, âDo you know what I really want?ââ
âWhat you really, really want,â I sing to the tune of Spice Girlsâ âWannabeââa not-so-subtle nod to John-Kamenâs first big gig in the Spice Girls musical Viva Forever! in Londonâs West End. âWhat I really, really, really want is a â90s-inspired outfit,â John-Kamen says with a laugh before she leaves to fulfill her current leading role: being a dog mom. She grabs her phone again to show me her pride and joy, a toy cockapoo called Mogley. âHeâs actually in doggy day care. Heâs with all his mates today. My dog is my child, and Iâm proud of it,â she beams. I can report both mother and 18-month-old baby are doing well.Â
Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City is out in cinemas on 3 December.
Photographer: Rashidi Noah
Photography Assistants: Adam Aouati and Joel Shoyemi
Stylist and Creative Director: Karen Clarkson at The Wall Group
Hairstylist: Stefan Bertin at The Wall Group
Makeup Artist: Kenneth Soh at The Wall Group
Special thanks to Romilly Bowlby at DDA
Author Josh Smith | Whowhatwear
Selected by CWC