Chinatown with Jack Nicholson: DVD Cover
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Chinatown Director: Roman Polanski Cast: Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, John Huston, Perry Lopez

DVD - 2 Disc Set - Remastered / Special Edition / Wide Screen / Restored Learn more

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  • DVD Release Date: 10/06/2009
  • Original Release: 1974
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 764

Viewer Rating: (9 ratings)

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Scenes

Features

Closed Caption; Dsic 1: Commentary with Robert Towne and David Fincher; Disc 2: Water and Power: - The Aqueduct; - The Aftermath; - The River & Beyond; Chinatown: An Appreciation; Chinatown: The Beginning and the End; Chinatown: Filming; Chinatown: The Legacy; Theatrical trailer

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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Chinatown
1. Chapter 1
2. Chapter 2
3. Chapter 3
4. Chapter 4
5. Chapter 5
6. Chapter 6
7. Chapter 7
8. Chapter 8
9. Chapter 9
10. Chapter 10
11. Chapter 11
12. Chapter 12
13. Chapter 13
14. Chapter 14
15. Chapter 15
16. Chapter 16

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

A dark Hollywood jewel from the 1970s, Chinatown remains among the most aggressively visceral experiences of evil ever committed to film. There's a lot to keep track of in Chinatown, and it all flows through Jack Nicholson, in one of his most potent performances. The dialogue is wonderfully sharp, courtesy of screenwriter Robert Towne. But what makes Chinatown so bracingly powerful and fresh is its genuine American malignancy. Chinatown's Los Angeles is a city born of a greedy desire to conquer a forbidding desert, a place where power excuses all perversion. Nicholson grafts flesh, bone, and soul onto the character of private eye Jake Gittes, a man familiar with compromise and rationalization who doesn't even realize his inner goodness until he confronts true evil --the wealthy land developer Noah Cross (a memorably wicked John Huston). Faye Dunaway, as the woman who draws Gittes into a complex mystery involving L.A.'s water supply, has never been more beautiful, or more haunted. And director Roman Polanski provides the perfect subverting eye for Chinatown, a beautiful sun-bleached dream built upon a soft bed of malignant criminality. Dave Roth, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

As perfect as a film can get. I wouldn't change a frame.by Anonymous

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August 21, 2005: 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...

This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen edition.

What Film Making Should Aways Beby Anonymous

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January 25, 2005: What a great movie on so many levels. The writing, acting, directing, and the cinematography all work together to make this movie an all time classic. Jack Nicholson gives one of his best performances as the private dectective who finds himself caught up in murder and the deep, dark secret of his client. Faye Dunaway does a quietly wonderful job as the desperate widow of the murdered man. The outward story of how water played an important role in the development of the L.A. region sets the stage for a story of betrayal at the most basic of levels. Chinatown is a movie to own.

This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen edition.


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