| | Chinatown DVD
| Category | Dramas DVDs, Thriller Movies, Mystery Videos, Recommended, Classic, Essential Cinema, Detective, Scams And Cons, Tragedy, Character Study, Film Noir, Deception, Disturbing, Corruption, AFI Top 100 Thrills, AFI Top 100 (1997), AFI Top 100, AFI Top 100 Movie Quotes, Classic Fight Scenes, Nostalgic, Blackmail, AFI Top 50 Villains, Vanity Fair 50 Greatest Films Of All Time | | Starring | Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, Diane Ladd, John Huston, Burt Young, Roy Roberts, Noble Willingham, Bruce Glover, John Hillerman, Joe Mantell, Rance Howard, Darrell Zwerling, Richard Bakalyan, James Hong, Roy Jenson, Jerry Fujikawa, Perry Lopez, Beulah Quo | | Director | Roman Polanski | | Cameo | Roman Polanski | | Composer | Jerry Goldsmith | | Costume Designer | Anthea Sylbert | | Director of Photography | John A. Alonzo | | Editor | Sam O'Steen List all 27 stars
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Additional Footage; Soundtrack English; Soundtrack French; Soundtrack Spanish; English Subtitles; Director's Comments Many films from the 1970s allow even the most gripping narratives to flow with the consequences of real life. CHINATOWN is a classic film whose intrigues and adventures culminate in life-changing moments for its protagonist, Jake Gittes (Jack Nicholson).
Director Roman Polanski's classic neo-noir detective story is set during a heat wave in 1930s Los Angeles, where residents suffer from a water shortage due to an ongoing drought. With stellar contributions from composer Jerry Goldsmith and screenwriter Robert Towne, whose script recalls the hard-boiled cynicism of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett, CHINATOWN is a complex and superbly crafted period drama that has become Polanski's most critically acclaimed film. Private investigator Gittes runs a sleazy detective agency. When a client (Diane Ladd) hires him to spy on her "husband," who is rumored to be having an affair with a younger woman, Jake uncovers a plot against the man--but this is only the tip of the iceberg. Still to emerge are a sex scandal implicating the real wife (Faye Dunaway), with whom Jake is destined to become more closely acquainted, and a real estate swindle of tremendous proportions devised by her tycoon father (John Huston), backed up by a vast network of corrupt city officials and landowners who make life hell for the private eye.
This story crystallizes the impact of a chance meeting with the romantic ideals of the early 1970s, when the American urban landscape and economic power structures were in flux. Theatrical release: June 21, 1974
Filmed in Los Angeles, California.
CHINATOWN is number 19 on the American Film Institute's list of America's 100 Greatest Movies.
CHINATOWN was added to the Library of Congress National Film Registry in 1991.
Director Roman Polanski makes a rather conspicuous cameo appearance as a thug.
Screenwriter Robert Towne had originally conceived of an alternate, happier ending to the film, but it was rejected by Polanski.
Polanski went to painstaking lengths to have the film very authentically capture 1930s Los Angeles because the story is based on actual events from the city's history.
CHINATOWN, which was produced in 1974, was Polanski's first American film since 1968's ROSEMARY'S BABY.
In 1990, Jack Nicholson went on to direct and star in the film's sequel, THE TWO JAKES, set in 1948 Los Angeles. The later film also starred Harvey Keitel and Meg Tilly and featured cameo performances by some actors who had parts in the original film, among them Faye Dunaway, James Hong, and Perry Lopez. Robert Towne wrote the screenplays for both films. Chinatown Quotes/Excerpts: "Forget it, Jake. It's Chinatown."--Walsh (Joe Mantell) to Jake Gittes (Jack Nicholson)
"It looks like half the city is trying to cover it all up, which is fine with me. But Mrs. Mulwray, I...near lost my nose! And I like it. I like breathing through it. And I still think you're hiding something."--Jake Gittes to Evelyn Mulwray (Faye Dunaway)
"I'm just a snoop."--Jake Gittes Chinatown Reviews: "...[Polanski] handles the mechanics of the plot with a ruthless brilliance that is immediately involving..."
-- Tom Milne, Sight and Sound "...Incomparable..."-- Troy Patterson, Entertainment Weekly "...Like most noir stories, CHINATOWN ends in a flurry of revelation....For Nicholson, the role had enormous importance..."
-- Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times "...A film noir masterpiece that never stops screwing with your head..."
-- Dorian Lynskey, Total Film "Faye Dunaway quivers, John Huston looms, but Nicholson's Gittes seems untouchable inside..."
-- Premiere Staff, Premiere "[T]he director's dark wit questions the conventions of noir, and exhales stylish seediness."
-- Chris Roberts, Uncut 5 stars out of 5 -- "Jack Nicholson lends J.J. Gittes nervy sharpness, and John Huston fills villainous Noah Cross with menace..."-- Ian Nathan, Empire
This is the only Beulah Quo video. Chinatown | List Price | $16.99 (You save $3.84) | | Studio | Paramount Home Entertainment | | Orig Year | 1974 | | DVD Encoding | Region 1 | | All Time Sales Rank | 74471  | | CD Universe Part number | 7980441 | | Catalog number | 072984 | | Discs | 2 | | Release Date | Oct 06, 2009 | | Rating | R (MPAA) | | Running Time | 130 Minutes | | Additional Info | Widescreen; Dubbed; Remastered; Special Edition; Subtitled | | Movie Details | Color; Widescreen; Dubbed; Remastered; Special Edition; Subtitled; Centennial Collection |
Chinatown Movie Review A Brilliant Screenplay and Movie. Reguardless of who was to star in this
film it would have been a hit.
The mysteries are deep and it takes a few viewings to commit all the details
to memory.
Jack is great in this.
See him in the "TWo Jakes" its the second movie featuring J.J. Geddis, Jacks Character.
Make sure you buy both and watch them on the same day. Submitted by Vince (Tampa) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
As perfect as a film can get. I wouldn't change a frame. Roman Polanski's "Chinatown" (1974) integrates moral despair with classic, and bankable, Hollywood elements--an atmospheric setting, a likable hero, a lady in distress, romance, suspense, and direct narrative and cinematic allusions to the Raymond Chandler crime movies of the forties. Though the film is set in Los Angeles of the thirties, the conspiracy it details is based on an actual fraud of 1905, in which wealthy Southern California businessmen and politicians staged a "drought" in order to ensure the public's acceptance of a controversial piece of water legislation, one that would help expand the city of Los Angeles and line their own pockets.
Robert Towne's Oscar-winning script is the story of private investigator. J. J. Gittes (Jack Nicholson), who is first used by the conspiracy in an effort to discredit an honest water commissioner. Gittes specializes in matrimonial work--spying and reporting on errant spouses--but his investigation will uncover a family sexual secret that surely tops his usual profession.
When the subject of Gittes' surveillance is killed, Gittes is confronted by his beautiful widow (Faye Dunaway), who, in the best Chandler tradition, is a poor liar. Gittes is a self-serving, narcissistic man, but he had at some date been expelled from the detective ranks of the police force, and he bears a particular dislike for bureaucratic functionaries. Naturally, he is intrigued by Mrs. Mulray (Dunaway), who first threatens to sue him and then promptly asks him to drop the investigation. Gittes' strength is also his weakness; his humane qualities--his independence and open mindedness--allow him to see what others do not, and ultimately his emotional attachment to Mrs. Mulray will serve to discredit his skillfully collected evidence.
Ironically, at one point the police threaten to arrest him on a charge of conspiracy. By the time he has gotten the goods on the man behind the plot, Noah Cross (John Huston), Gittes has so antagonized the police that they pointedly dismiss him as a hindrance.
"Chinatown" is an engrossing, fast paced film that is both a parody and a revival of the old Hollywood detective genre. It is also a complex picture. Anyone who leaves his seat, even for an instant, risks missing a new turn in the twisting story. As the complex plot unravels, we discover more and more about what is actually happening or what is apparently happening. Nothing is what it seems, which is, as we will learn, the reason for the film's name. Chinatown is the district where Jake Gittes started his career as a cop. It is a section of Los Angeles where bizarre things happen regularly. Cops who want to survive in this world learn that if in doubt, it is best to back off and do nothing. Throughout the film, "Chinatown" represents not only an ethnic zone which defies police penetration, but a state of mind; Chinatown is where Gittes arranges for Mrs. Mulray to go to evade her father and the police; it is a place of compromised strength where emotion conquers professional coolness and it is the place where Gittes mistakes ideals for possibilities.
As in the metaphor of "Jaws" (1975), "Chinatown" activates man's primal relationship with water as a weakness. In "Chinatown", water is used for recreation; it is also a weapon (The Water Commissioner is drowned in a pond, Gittes is almost swept under in a drainage gulley); but in the film's strongest indictment of capitalism, water--a primary element of nature--becomes a viable currency, to be hoarded, diverted and controlled for private interest. "Chinatown" uncovers a conspiracy where the public is least likely to suspect it, in an element that is both familiar and benign.
Much of the film's success is due to Robert Towne's screenplay. Originally, he wrote the script like a standard detective movie that he planned to direct himself. Then he saw some photographs of Los Angeles circa 1930 and became fascinated with the old-time looks of the city. At the same time, he did some research into L.A.'s early years and found that some municipal fathers had enriched themselves by acquiring land that was the source of the city's water supply. So "Chinatown" becomes a fictionalized account of corruption and greed in the Los Angeles of pre-World War II days. Interwoven with this story are two puzzles--the water-supply mystery and a family mystery.
A tremendous asset for the film is the haunting, romantic score by the great Jerry Goldsmith, one of the most influential film scores ever written. It's hard to imagine that Goldsmith actually composed this score in ten days. Producer Robert Evans was so dissatisfied with the film's original composer Phillip Lambro's score that he scrapped it and hired Goldsmith to write a new one on the eve of the film's scheduled release. In my opinion, this was Goldsmith's finest score in a stunning career that spanned six decades. [filmfactsman] Submitted by filmfactsman (Beverly Hills, CA, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
One of Nicholson's Best Jack Nicholson does a terrific job again. Submitted by Blake (Brandon,MS) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No This review is for a different format.
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Chinatown DVD Region 1 Widescreen Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English, French, Spanish Subtitles - English, French, Spanish
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