Chinatown (film)
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Chinatown | |
---|---|
Directed by | Roman Polański |
Produced by | Robert Evans |
Written by | Robert Towne Roman Polański (uncredited) |
Starring | Jack Nicholson Faye Dunaway John Huston |
Music by | Jerry Goldsmith |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date(s) | June 20, 1974 (U.S.A.) |
Running time | 131 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | $6,000,000 US (est.) |
IMDb profile |
Chinatown is a 1974 film directed by Roman Polanski featuring many elements of the film noir genre, particularly a multi-layered story that is part mystery and part psychological drama. The movie won several high-profile awards, including an Academy Award in 1975 for Best Writing and Original Screenplay for Robert Towne.
Chinatown stars Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, and John Huston and also features a cameo appearance by its director, Roman Polański. The film has been selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. A sequel, called The Two Jakes, was released in 1990, starring Jack Nicholson (who also directed it), with a screenplay written by Robert Towne.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
A Los Angeles Private Investigator named Jake 'J.J' Gittes (Nicholson) is hired by a woman who claimed to be Mrs. Mulwray to spy on her husband, Hollis Mulwray, the chief engineer for the city's water department. Mr. Mulwray spends most of his time investigating dry river beds. Mr. Mulwray also has a heated argument with an elderly man. Finally Gittes catches Mulwray having an outing with a young blonde and photographs the pair in a kiss, which becomes a scandal in the press.
When the real Mrs. Evelyn Mulwray (Dunaway) appears at Gittes's office and serves him with a lawsuit, Gittes is concerned for his professional reputation and pursues the case further. Clues suggest a scandal in the city government: despite a serious drought and an expensive proposal to build a new dam, the Water and Power department is dumping fresh water into the ocean at night.
Gittes tries to find Mr. Mulwray but finds the police there instead investigating Hollis Mulwray's death from drowning. When the police speak to Mrs. Mulwray about the death they assume she hired Gittes, which Gittes corroborates. She thanks him and hires him to investigate what happened to her husband.
Later that night, Gittes is confronted by a thug who slices part of his nose for being a "very nosy fella." Gittes receives a call from Ida Sessions, the woman who was hired to pretend to be Mrs. Mulwray, who suggests that Gittes look at the obituary column. At the water department Gittes notices photographs of the elderly man Mulwray quarreled with a few days before his death, Noah Cross (Huston). Cross, who is Evelyn Mulwray's father, used to own the water department as Mulwray's business partner. Cross ended his association with the department when the partners sold it to the city.
Cross hires Gittes to find the blonde Mulwray had been seeing, saying that she might know what happened to him. Acting on a hint from Ida Sessions, Gittes traces the dynamics of the water scandal. Cross and his partners have been forcing farmers out of their land so they can buy it cheap, afterwhich a newly-built (and controversial) dam and water system would start redirecting much of L.A.'s water supply to that land to increase its value. Since Cross wants no record of such transactions, he has partnered with a retirement home community in such a way that many of the eldest residents within (one of whom is mentioned in the obituary column) would legally own the land, unbeknownst to them.
Gittes follows Evelyn to a middle class house, and sees Mulwray's girlfriend crying. Evelyn claims this is her sister who was crying because she had just learned about Mulwray's death. Later that night, Ida Sessions is murdered. Escobar points out that the coroner's report proves that salt water was found in Mulwray's lungs even though the body was found in a freshwater reservoir.
Gittes returns to Evelyn's mansion, where he discovers a pair of eyeglasses in a saltwater pond. Gittes confronts Evelyn, who reveals that the blonde girl is her sister and her daughter; Cross had raped her when she was 15 years old, after which Mulwray rescued Evelyn. Evelyn remembers that the eyeglasses could not have been her husband's because they are bifocals. Gittes arranges for the two women to flee to Mexico and instructs Evelyn to meet him at her butler's address in Chinatown. One of Cross's men takes away the eyeglasses that are the only physical evidence. When Gittes arrives at Evelyn's hiding place in Chinatown the police are already there with Cross.
When Cross approaches Evelyn, she shoots him in the arm and starts her car. The police arrest Gittes and as the car moves away, they open fire and Evelyn is shot and killed. Cross clutches Evelyn's shrieking daughter as a devastated Gittes is "comforted" by his associates, one of them saying, "Forget it, Jake. It's Chinatown."
The plot is based in part on real events that formed the California Water Wars, in which William Mulholland acted on behalf of Los Angeles interests to secure water rights in the Owens Valley.
[edit] Notes
Chinatown was the first part of a planned trilogy written by Robert Towne about J.J. Gittes and L.A. The second part, The Two Jakes, about the natural gas business in Los Angeles in the 1940s, was directed by Nicholson and released in 1990. However, this film's commercial and critical failure scuttled plans to make Cloverleaf, a film about the development of the area's freeway system. Because this film was the first of a planned trilogy, Jack Nicholson turned down all detective roles he was offered so that the only detective he played would be Jake Gittes. Jake Gittes was named after Jack Nicholson's friend, producer Harry Gittes. The original script was over 180 pages. Roman Polanski eliminated Jake Gittes' voiceover narration, which was written in the script, and filmed the movie so the audience discovered the clues at the same time Gittes did.
Robert Towne intended the screenplay to have a happy ending. Polanski and Towne argued over the ending, with Polanski insisting on a tragic ending. Towne was originally offered $125,000 to write a screenplay for The Great Gatsby (1974), but Towne felt he couldn't better the F. Scott Fitzgerald novel, and accepted $25,000 to write his own story, "Chinatown," instead.
The characters Hollis Mulwray and Noah Cross are both references to the chief engineer for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, William Mulholland (1855-1935)--the name Hollis Mulwray an anagram for Mulholland. The name Noah is a reference to a flood--to suggest the conflict between good and evil in Mulholland. Mulholland was the designer and engineer for the Los Angeles Aqueduct, which brought water from the Owens Valley to Los Angeles. The dam Cross and the city want to build--and which Mulwray opposes for reasons of engineering and safety--is a direct reference to the St. Francis Dam which catastrophically failed in 1928, killing more than 600 people and ending Mulholland's career.
This was the last movie Roman Polanski filmed in the US. Polanski was outraged when producer Robert Evans ordered the film lab to give Chinatown a reddish look. Polanski demanded that the film be corrected. Polanski has a cameo role, portraying the hood who slits Jake's nose.
Phillip Lambro was originally hired to write the film's music score but it was rejected at the last minute by producer Robert Evans, leaving Jerry Goldsmith only ten days to write and record the new score. The haunting trumpet solos are by the Hollywood studio musician Uan Rasey.
[edit] Selected quotations
From the first meeting between Jake and Mrs. Mulwray:
- Jake, to Mrs Mulwray: "There's no point in getting tough with me. I'm just..."
- Mrs. Mulwray to Jake: "I don't 'get tough' with anyone Mr. Gittes; my lawyer does."
Russ Yelburton, observing Jake's bandaged nose:
- "You've got to be more careful: that must really smart."
- "Only when I breathe."
Noah Cross on "respectability":
- "Politicians, ugly buildings and whores all get respectable if they last long enough."
After Gittes bluffs his way past a policeman:
- "So, tell me Gittes, how'd you get past the guard?"
- "Well, to tell ya the truth, I lied a little."
Mrs. Mulwray, conversing with Jake in the restaurant:
- "Look, Hollis seems to think you're an innocent man."
- "Well, I've been accused of many things Mrs. Mulwray, but never that."
Excerpt from a phone conversation:
- "Hello, Miss Sessions. I don't believe we've had the pleasure."
- "Oh, yes we have. Are you alone?"
- "Isn't everyone?"
Loach (Escobar's assistant) and Gittes:
- "What's the matter with your nose, Gittes? Someone slam a bedroom window on it?"
- "Nope. Your wife got excited. She crossed her legs a little too quick. You understand what I mean, pal?"
Japanese gardener:
- "Bad for glass." (This is mangled-- near the end of the film, Jake discovers he's really saying "Bad for grass".)
Final lines:
- "Forget it, Jake. It's Chinatown."
[edit] Awards
[edit] Academy Awards - 1975
Wins:
- Best Original Screenplay - Robert Towne
Nominations:
- Best Picture - Robert Evans
- Best Director - Roman Polanski
- Best Actor - Jack Nicholson
- Best Actress - Faye Dunaway
- Best Film Editing - Sam O'Steen
- Best Art Direction - Richard Sylbert, W. Stewart Campbell, Ruby Levitt
- Best Costume Design - Anthea Sylbert
- Best Cinematography - John A. Alonzo
- Best Sound Mixing - Bud Grenzbach, Larry Jost
- Best Music Score - Jerry Goldsmith
[edit] Golden Globes - 1975
Wins:
- Best Motion Picture - Drama - Robert Evans
- Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama - Jack Nicholson
- Best Director - Roman Polanski
- Best Screenplay - Robert Towne
Nominations
- Actor In A Supporting Role - John Huston
- Best Actress - Motion Picture Drama - Faye Dunaway
- Best Original Score - Jerry Goldsmith
[edit] Other Awards
- 1975 BAFTA, Best Actor (Nicholson), Best Direction, Best Screenplay (male)
- 1975 Edgar Award, Best Motion Picture Screenplay - Robert Towne
- 1991 National Film Preservation Board
[edit] Bibliography
- Easton, Michael (1998) Chinatown (B.F.I. Film Classics series). Los Angeles: University of California Press. ISBN 0-85170-532-4.
- Towne, Robert (1997). Chinatown and the Last Detail: 2 Screenplays. New York: Grove Press. ISBN 0-8021-3401-7.
- Tuska, Jon (1978). The Detective in Hollywood. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company. ISBN 0-385-12093-1.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Chinatown at the Internet Movie Database
- Tim Dirks' analysis of Chinatown, one of "The Greatest Films"
- Roger Ebert's complete review of Chinatown
- Thrilling Detective's study of the character of Jake Gittes from Chinatown through The Two Jakes.
- Andy's Movie Quotes - page for Chinatown
- - conversation with sceenwriter Robert Towne
- skyjude - movie legends
- - Water Woes
Categories: 1974 films | Best Picture Academy Award nominees | Crime films | Edgar Award winning works | Films directed by Roman Polański | Films featuring a Best Actor Academy Award nominated performance | Films featuring a Best Actress Academy Award nominated performance | Incest in fiction | Mystery films | Neo-noir | Paramount films | Period films | Thriller films | United States National Film Registry