It’s 1937 Los Angeles. Specializing in cases of cheating spouses, private investigator Jake ‘J.J.’ Gittes is tailing Hollis Mulwray, whose wife suspects him of marital infidelity. Mulwray is the high profile chief engineer for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. Him being high profile is because of the chronic drought in the Los Angeles area and the importance of fresh water to the growing community. Most of what Gittes witnesses in following Mulwray are some usual and some not so usual business dealings, among the former being a public meeting for construction of a new dam to create an additional water supply for Los Angeles, the dam which Mulwray opposes. But Gittes eventually witnesses Mulwray meeting with a young unknown woman who is not his wife. Once news of the supposed tryst between Mulwray and this woman hits the media, additional information comes to light that makes Gittes believe that Mulwray is being framed for something and that he himself is being set-up. Gittes is assisted in his investigation of the issue behind Mulwray’s framing and his own set-up by Mulwray’s wife, Evelyn Mulwray. Despite Evelyn’s help, Gittes also believes that she isn’t being totally forthright with him. The further he gets into the investigation, the more secrets he uncovers about the professional and personal dealings of the Mulwrays, which includes Mulwray’s former business partnership with Evelyn’s father, Noah Cross. The identity of the unknown woman may be the key to uncovering the whole story.
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Rating:
(106,484 votes)
- Runtime:130 minutes
- Director: Roman Polanski
- Country:USA
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Actors: J.J. GittesJack NicholsonEvelyn MulwrayFaye DunawayNoah CrossJohn HustonEscobarPerry LopezYelburtonJohn HillermanHollis MulwrayDarrell ZwerlingIda SessionsDiane LaddMulvihillRoy JensonMan with KnifeRoman PolanskiLoach (as Dick Bakalyan)Richard Bakalyan
- Genres:Crime, Drama, Mystery, Thriller
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Producers: C.O. Ericksonassociate producerRobert Evansproducer
- Plots: JJ 'Jake' Gittes is a private detective who seems to specialize in matrimonial cases. He is hired by Evelyn Mulwray when she suspects her husband Hollis, builder of the city's water supply system, of having an affair. Gittes does what he does best and photographs him with a young girl but in the ensuing scandal, it seems he was hired by an impersonator and not the real Mrs. Mulwray. When Mr. Mulwray is found dead, Jake is plunged into a complex web of deceit involving murder, incest and municipal corruption all related to the city's water supply. Written by garykmcd
- User's comment:As coolly intense and exceptionally-staged as any detective story/film-noir of the 40's & 50's by MisterWhiplash
Chinatown is a tremendous collaborative effort that produced one of the most memorable Hollywood pictures of the 1970's. Director Roman Polanski (his last film in America, and the first he made in America after the murder of Sharon Tate), stars Jack Nicholson & Faye Dunaway, and writer Robert Towne, all come together to create a detective story classic. At times it slows its pace down so the viewer can think along with Nicholson's character, to take in the environment as well as the situation he's in (i.e. when he goes to the empty reservoir, when he visits Noah Crosses house the first time). And the script has the perfect sense of drawing us into a story, fueled by curiosity, grit, and cynicism, and engages the viewer by its realistic dialog between the characters.
J.J. Gittes (Nicholson, in one of his best 70's performances) is in Los Angeles circa 1933 in the line of private investigator, usually dealing with people who may or may not believe that their significant other is having an affair. Evelyn Mulwray feels this may be the case with her husband Hollis, and Gittes decides to take the case. However, this draws him into a deeper case involving the city's loss of water once Hollis- a major player in the water supply controversy in the city- is found murdered. This eventually leads him to Noah Cross (John Huston), a big businessman and who also happens to be Evelyn's father. Intrigue starts to develop, as Jake's own life begins to be at risk.
As a intricate, detailed detective story the film is an above-average work, with Towne's script containing the maturity, and wicked sense of humor, of a James M. Cain or Raymond Chandler novel. When the thrills come they come as being striking. And when humanity and compassion get thrown into the mix, the film reaches a whole other plane of intelligence. The last third of the film could turn off some of the audience (depending on one's own level of belief), but it holds strong thanks to the performances. Nicholson doesn't over-step his bounds in any scene, finding the right notes in suggestive conversations. Dunaway is better than expected (though I'm not sure if it's an great performance). And Huston's Noah Cross is one of the more disturbing villains of that period in movies. Add to it some good cameos (Burt Young as a driver, Polanski playing the little guy in the infamous 'knife' scene), and a smooth soundtrack by Jerry Goldsmith, Chinatown comes out as strong piece of movie-making, and arguably one of the greatest in the crime/mystery genre.
- Quotes: Jake Gittes: You're dumber than you think I think you are.
Jake Gittes: So there's this guy Walsh, do you understand? He's tired of screwin' his wife... So his friend says to him, "Hey, why don't you do it like the Chinese do?" So he says, "How do the Chinese do it?" And the guy says, "Well, the Chinese, first they screw a little bit, then they stop, then they go and read a little Confucius, come back, screw a little bit more, then they stop again, go and they screw a little bit... then they go back and they screw a little bit more and then they go out and they contemplate the moon or something like that. Makes it more exciting." So now, the guy goes home and he starts screwin' his own wife, see. So he screws her for a little bit and then he stops, and he goes out of the room and reads Life Magazine. Then he goes back in, he starts screwin' again. He says, "Excuse me for a minute, honey." He goes out and he smokes a cigarette. Now his wife is gettin' sore as hell. He comes back in the room, he starts screwin' again. He gets up to start to leave again to go look at the moon. She looks at him and says, "Hey, whats the matter with ya. You're screwin' just like a Chinaman!"
Noah Cross: Either you bring the water to L.A. or you bring L.A. to the water.
- Also known as: Chinatown (Brazil), Chinatown (Canada - French title), Chinatown (Denmark), Chinatown (Finland), Chinatown (Finland - Swedish title), Chinatown (France), Chinatown (Greece), Chinatown (Italy), Chinatown (Japan - English title), Chinatown (Poland), Chinatown (Portugal - original subtitled version), Chinatown (Spain), Chinatown (West Germany), Kineska cetvrt (Serbia), Kineska cetvrt (Yugoslavia - imdb display title, Croatian title), Barrio Chino (Mexico - imdb display title), Barrio chino (Argentina), Cínská ctvrt (Czechoslovakia), Cartierul chinezesc (Romania - imdb display title), Kínai negyed (Hungary),

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