Posted on 04/12/2020 10:23:15 AM PDT by Rummyfan
Theres a moment midway through the film Chinatown (1974) in which the hero, Jake Gittes, hands us a cluenot a clue about the case hes investigating, the one involving graft and murder in L.A.s Department of Water and Power, but a more subtextual kind of clue, hinting at the meaning of the films enigmatic title. Jake (Jack Nicholson) and his client, Evelyn Mulwray (Faye Dunaway), are standing in her back yard, and shes prodding him about his life before he became a private eye, when he worked as a cop in Chinatown. What did he do there, she asks? As little as possible, Jake replies. This bit of dialogue may seem innocuous, but it was, in fact, the inspiration for the entire film, taken by screenwriter Robert Towne from an actual Chinatown cop, whom he met in the early 1970s. In Chinatown, the policeman explained, you have to do as little as possible, not because youre lazy per se, but because you never know whats going on, whether youre preventing a crime or abetting one.1 Towne loved this idea, seeing it not only as a good line for a movie but a metaphor for life in Los Angeles, a place where you may think you know whats going on, but you never really do. If hed had his way, the film wouldnt have had a single scene set in Chinatown. The title, he thought, spoke for itself.
Although he was already well known in Hollywood as a go-to script doctorhe had penned scenes for Bonnie and Clyde (1967) and The Godfather (1972)Towne effectively made his name with Chinatown and has dined off its success ever since. In 1979, screenwriting guru Syd Field dubbed it the best American screenplay written during the 1970s, and in subsequent decades the script has made so many top-10 lists that singing its praises can now seem almost trite.2 Critics point out (quite rightly) that every revelation in the story is doled at precisely the right moment, pushing the plot along without ever spoiling the mystery, and that every eventindeed, every line of dialogueserves a purpose, from Gittess crude jokes to his observation, in the first minutes of the film, that sometimes its best to let sleeping dogs lie.3 If only hed heeded his own advice.
One of my all-time faves. That Polanski later turned out to be a major perv... well, it's still a great flick.
Towne ruined Chinatown. The first 3/4 were good, but the last 1/4 was awful.
I don’t think I’ve seen it. I’ll have to check it out. Thanks for posting! It’s nice to see recommended films pop up now and again.
I have not seen that movie in decades. However, I recall being confused about the title, as the storyline had to do with water projects and land deals, and didn’t connect to Chinatown, or activity with ethnic Chinese people.
Perhaps I missed the point. Just from recall not having seen the movie in about 30 years.
Don’t overlook the sultry atmosphere created by Jerry Goldsmith’s outstanding score. The trumpet solo by Uan Racy is so iconic it makes me tear up every time I hear it. Goldsmith reprieves some of the same effect in his later score for “LA Confidential” but its only a copy of the original masterpiece mixed with the evocative pop tunes of the ‘50s.
Under the original name, there is also a 1975 version with Robert Mitchum as detective Philip Marlowe in period costume.
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