Film Review
Whilst the 1970s is usually considered to be the decade that taste
forgot, it did furnish one or two notable cultural achievements.
One of these was the rebirth of the American gangster film and with it
the emergence the
neo-noir
style of thriller, inspired by the distinctive look of the classic film
noir films of the 1940s. Names such as Francis Ford Coppola,
Martin Scorsese and Robert Altman immediately spring to mind when one
considers the most significant examples of the genre in this
decade. However, perhaps the best thriller of this kind was Roman
Polanski's
Chinatown, which
has to be one of the sleekest, most seductive and most perfectly
constructed crime thrillers of all time.
Prior to
Chinatown, Polanski
had made several highly acclaimed films, of which the best known was
the chilling psychological horror thriller
Rosemary's
Baby (1968). Following the brutal murder of his wife,
Sharon Tate, in 1969, the director abandoned his career in Hollywood
and went into exile in Europe, where he made some intensely dark
films. He was reluctant to return to the United States but the
promise of
Chinatown proved
too strong to resist. Not only did he have a first rate script
but he had a great cast, which included Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway
and John Huston. The latter, of course, is the director of many a
film noir classic, including the legendary
The Maltese Falcon (1942).
Chinatown is the
quintessential American noir thriller but it also has a distinctive
European art house quality that makes it not just a highly entertaining film
but also a stylish piece of cinematic art. The brooding mood and grim air of fatalism that hang over
the film are undercut by some strained sardonic humour (the fact that
Polanski chose to play the character who disfigures Jack Nicholson
is one of the best film in-jokes ever).
There is a poignant lyrical quality, which emerges partly from Nicholson's darkly
introspective performance, partly from the subtle irony in the story,
but mainly from John Alonzo's hauntingly beautiful cinematography which is highly
evocative of the era in which the film is set.
Most, if not all,
of Roman Polanski's films have dark undercurrents that suggest hidden,
all-powerful forces lurking in the shadows, beneath the floorboards
and, sometimes, at the back of the fridge.
Chinatown is a perfect illustration
of this, and there is a sense of something sinister in virtually every
shot. The appropriation of the first person narrative, the
paucity of action scenes and the deliberate, slow pace of the film all
serve to heighten the tension as the drama builds, gradually and
inexorably, towards its bleak and horrifying climax. A stunning
film - and Polanski's finest achievement.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Roman Polanski film:
Le Locataire (1976)
Film Synopsis
Jake Gittes is a Los Angeles private investigator who specialises in
adultery cases. He is hired by Mrs Mulwray to provide her with
evidence that her husband, who happens to be the head of the city's
water department, is having an affair with a young woman. Not
long after Gittes comes up with the goods, Mulwray is found dead and his
wife - who bears no resemblance to the woman who originally hired
Gittes - threatens to sue the private eye. Suspecting he is a
pawn in a game of political or corporate intrigue, Gittes begins his
own investigation and soon realises that he is up against a dangerous
and cunning opponent. Someone is dumping vast amounts of precious
water from the city's reservoirs. But why...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.