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Chinatown

United States

1974

131 Min
  • Currently 4.4/5 Stars.
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DIR Roman Polanski

PROD Robert Evans

SCR Roman Polanski, Robert Towne

DP John A. Alonzo

CAST Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, John Huston, Perry Lopez, Roman Polanski

ED Sam O'Steen

Synopsis

“You may think you know what you’re dealing with, but believe me, you don’t,” warns water baron Noah Cross (John Huston), when smooth cop-turned-private eye J.J. “Jake” Gittes (Jack Nicholson) starts nosing around Cross’s water diversion scheme. That proves to be the ominous lesson of Chinatown, Roman Polanski’s critically lauded 1974 revision of 1940s film noir detective movies. In 1930s Los Angeles, “matrimonial work” specialist Gittes is hired by Evelyn Mulwray (Faye Dunaway) to tail her husband, Water Department engineer Hollis Mulwray (Darrell Zwerling). Gittes photographs him in the company of a young blonde and figures the case is closed, only to discover that the real Mrs. Mulwray had nothing to do with hiring Gittes in the first place. When Hollis turns up dead, Gittes decides to investigate further, encountering a shady old-age home, corrupt bureaucrats, angry orange farmers, and a nostril-slicing thug (Polanski) along the way. By the time he confronts Cross, Evelyn’s father and Mulwray’s former business partner, Jake thinks he knows everything, but an even more sordid truth awaits him. When circumstances force Jake to return to his old beat in Chinatown, he realizes just how impotent he is against the wealthy, depraved Cross. “Forget it, Jake,” his old partner tells him. “It’s Chinatown.” Reworking the somber underpinnings of detective noir along more pessimistic lines, Polanski and screenwriter Robert Towne convey a ‘70s-inflected critique of capitalist and bureaucratic malevolence in a carefully detailed period piece harkening back to the genre’s roots in the 1930s and ‘40s. Gittes always has a smart comeback like Humphrey Bogart’s Sam Spade and Philip Marlowe, but the corruption Gittes finds is too deep for one man to stop. Other noir revisions, such as Robert Altman’s The Long Goodbye (1973) and Arthur Penn’s Night Moves (1975), also centered on the detective’s inefficacy in an uncertain ‘70s world, but Chinatown’s period sheen renders this dilemma at once contemporary and timeless, pointing to larger implications about the effects of corporate rapaciousness on individuals. Polanski and Towne clashed over Chinatown’s ending; Polanski won the fight, but Towne won the Oscar for Best Screenplay. Chinatown was nominated for ten other Oscars, including Picture, Director, Actor, Actress, Cinematography, Art Direction, Costumes, and Score.

(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:9362)

Director

Roman_polanski

Roman Polanski

The son of a Polish Jew and a Russian immigrant, Polanski was born in Paris on August 18, 1933. When he was three, his family moved to the Polish town of Krakow, an unfortunate decision given that the Germans invaded the city in 1940. Things went from bad to worse with the formation of Krakow’s Jewish ghetto, and Polanski’s family was the target of further persecution when his parents were deported to a concentration camp. Just before he was to be taken away, however, Polanski’s father helped his son escape, and the boy managed to survive with help from kindly Catholic families, although he was at times forced to fend for himself. (At one point, the Germans decided to use Polanski for idle target practice.) It was during this period that Polanski became a devoted cinephile, seeking refuge in movie houses whenever possible. Shortly after sustaining serious injuries in an explosion, Polanski learned of his mother’s death at Auschwitz. His father survived the camps, and moved back to Krakow… read more

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Displaying 4 of 20 wall posts.
Picture of Erdem

Erdem

20Dec09

just superb!  
Picture of definedivine

definedivine

22Nov09

Probably everything about this movie has been said already (even about it's little flaws), so i will just repeat that it's a f.. masterpiece. And i loved the whole concept of ending of the movie.  
Picture of Lorna Singh

Lorna Singh

27Sep09

Just excellent.Acting,directing,writing--priceless dialogue.  
Picture of bingbong

bingbong

24Sep09

this movie is great, but there was something about the ending that just made me angry/upset. seriously, who has that kind of accuracy with a pistol from that far away? c'mon...... In the end, however, this film is riddled with twists that kept me guessing to the very end. oh, and incest is wierd.  

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Untitled

By Wayne Rockmor​e on November 3, 2009

Chinatown in one of the few untouchable movies for me. My praises of this film are immeasurable. It just might be my pick for the best movie ever made. If not then it ranks comfortably beside the other…  read review

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By Tom Trinche​ra on October 26, 2009

My absolute favorite film. Though it draws on the dialog and plot themes of film noir of the 40s thru the 60s, it’s still the one film I’ve seen that can’t be topped for dialog – Robert Towne did an…  read review

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By gmarcbe​ntely on August 16, 2009

Chinatown – Principled Perceptions of Pernicious Persons (originally written March 20th, 2009)

I have always been amazed at the impact our perceptions have on our
interpersonal relationships…  read review

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By John "The K man" Smith on August 7, 2009

This film is absolutely, amazingly, holy shitingly wonderful. It has the classic Polanski pessimism, it holds no blows. Jack Nicholson is great in his role, and John Huston, the master that he is…  read review

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