DIRECTED BY Roman Polanski
STARRING Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, John Huston
Opens April 23, Cert 15, 130 mins
Though it was Polanskiโs most acclaimed film before the overrated The Pianist, 1974โs Chinatown?massively reliant on Robert Towneโs seductive script?was never typical of his work. His themes of sexual violence and jealousy were toned down, and he indulged instead in a love-hate nostalgia for the heyday of noir. While juggling the perspectives of Chandleresque fiction, he allowed classy performances to drive the story, his directing deliberate and subdued (albeit with much clinical voyeurism). Itโs nonetheless entered the lexicon of LA as represented in movies.
Private eye Jake Gittes (Nicholson) is hired by Evelyn (Dunaway) to tail her husband, whoโs escorting a mystery blonde. But Jakeโs been set up, and is pushed beyond his depth into a labyrinth of corruption involving crooked bureaucrats, incest and the Water Departmentโs plans to shaft farmers. The big (bad) daddy figure is Evelynโs father (regally played, with implicit postmodernism, by Huston). Despite having his nose nicked by an unlikely hoodlum (Polanski), Jake, handcuffed physically and metaphorically, canโt make things right. He fatalistically accepts that, for some, immoralityโs a state of mind?itโs โChinatownโ.
Polanski himself deemed this a hack job, done to prove to producer Robert Evans he was back on track after the Manson murders and Macbeth. Most film-lovers would beg to differ.