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In crime fiction, a cleaner is a person who destroys or removes any incriminating evidence at the scene of a crime, typically a murder, as if the crime never happened. Knowledge of crime scene investigation is required, as well as an implacable manner as the perpetrator, who is usually agitated and confused, is inevitably involved with the cleanup.[citation needed] A cleaner can also refer to an assassin, as murder might be required to "clean" up a situation. The assassin Léon, from the movie of the same name, referred to himself in this way. A cleaner is also a slang term for an individual (usually a member of a crime organization or a covert government agency) who disposes of a corpse after a hit. In real life, there is an industry of cleaning up after crime scenes. This involves removing blood and other biohazardous material, or dangerous chemicals used in an illegal drug lab.[1]
[edit] Movies & TelevisionCurdled is about a woman who takes a job cleaning up crime scenes after the police investigate. The short on which it is based inspired Quentin Tarantino to include an underworld cleaner, played by Harvey Keitel, in Pulp Fiction. Keitel also played a cleaner in Point of No Return. Jean Reno played Viktor, a cleaner in the first sense of the term, above, in the film Nikita. In the later film, Léon, he played Léon, an assassin who referred to himself as a cleaner, demonstrating the second sense of the term as well. Luc Besson has stated that these two characters are related [2]. Jonathan Banks portrays a cleaner in the AMC series Breaking Bad. The fiction film Sunshine Cleaning is based around the business of crime scene cleaning. In the sitcom Seinfeld, episode 155 The Muffin Tops, Newman plays a 'cleaner' (in a parody of Pulp Fiction) who "makes problems go away" by eating leftover muffin bases. [edit] See also[edit] Examples
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