Showing posts with label Burt Young. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Burt Young. Show all posts

Saturday, 23 April 2022

Chinatown

 Year:  1974

Director:  Roman Polanski

Screenplay:  Robert Towne

Starring:  Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, John Hillerman, Perry Lopez, Burt Young, John Huston

Running Time:  134 minutes

Genre:  Crime, mystery, drama


Los Angeles, 1937:  Cynical private investigator Jake Gittes (Nicholson) is hired to investigate a seemingly simple case of suspected marital infidelity.  However, he soon finds himself drawn into a murderous criminal conspiracy over water rights. As he pursues his investigation, Gittes uncovers secrets far darker than he could have suspected.

Inspired by the real life "California water wars", a series of disputes in the early 20th century over the rights to supply water in Southern California, this is one of the classic American films of the 1970s.  Film noir was a subgenere of American film which flourished during the 1940s and 1950s.  Literally translated as "black film",  film noir featured dark, cynical and bleak stories with often stylish, shadowy cinematography.  Chinatown is an example of "neo-noir"in that it came after the period of film noir, but still hearkens back to it in terms of plot and style, albeit with an updated sensibility. The darkness of the film's content is somehow complemented by mostly taking place in bright sunshine.  Jack Nicholson gives one of his best performances as the cynical detective Jake Gittes, charismatic, tough and sometimes dangerous, but with a moral centre.  Faye Dunaway gives a powerful, complex performance as the brittle femme fatale Evelyn Mulwray, who turns out to be more of a tragic victim.  Legendary director John Huston plays the courtly, avuncular, fabulously wealthy and thoroughly evil Noah Cross, who is terrifying because he is so friendly and polite.  Roman Polanski has a cameo as a henchman who slices Gittes' nose in a memorable scene.  The screenplay by Robert Towne is superbly crafted, with every element fitting together like clockwork, although Polanski apparently rearranged some scenes, and also wrote the film's bleak conclusion.  Polanski, ghastly human being although he may be, was a great filmmaker, and this is one of his finest moments as director.  Despite the title, only the film's final few minutes are set in the Chinatown area of Los Angeles, although it is mentioned in several places that Jake was a policeman in Chinatown, and something terrible happened there which is never revealed, but which made him leave the force and seemingly left him with lasting trauma,  and so Chinatown in the film is less a physical place than a state of mind, as after the devastating climax, which is still shocking even after several viewings, Gittes' partner in his detective agency delivers the film's classic closing line:  "Forget it, Jake.  It's Chinatown."



Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown


Friday, 26 April 2019

Rocky II

Year of Release:  1979
Director:  Sylvester Stallone
Screenplay:  Sylvester Stallone
Starring:  Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire, Burt Young, Carl Weathers, Burgess Meredith 
Running Time:  119 minutes
Genre:  Drama, sports

Sequels are sometimes seen as shameless attempts to grab more cash from the fans of an already successful film, and while plenty are like that, there are many sequels which are as good, if not better, than the original. Rocky II is certainly as good as it's predecessor, and in some ways it is better.  It picks up straight from where the first film ends, with boxers Rocky Balboa (Stallone) and Apollo Creed (Weathers) recovering from their championship fight.  Despite having technically won the fight, Apollo has lost face due to how close the match was, and is determined to have a rematch with Rocky to salvage his pride.  However, Rocky has retired from boxing, and having married his girlfriend Adrian (Shire), and with a large payday from the fight, newfound fame and sponsorship and endorsement deals, the future is looking pretty rosy.  However, Rocky is not very good with money, and soon fritters it all away, and his fame and endorsement deals soon dry up.  With a growing family to support, Apollo's insistent demands for a rematch become hard to ignore.

The film retains all the things that fans of the first film enjoyed, including the triumphant training montage and climatic boxing match, which is bigger and better this time round.  It also retains the gritty, working class feel of the first film, even if it lacks some of it's edge.  Stallone is good as ever as Rocky, the tough bruiser with a gentle heart, Talia Shire is good, if underused as Rocky's new wife Adrian, and Burgess Meredith is great as Mickey, the broken down old pug who trains Rocky.  Carl Weathers is good as ever as Apollo Creed, and it's a pity that the film doesn't have more of him.  The character has an edge that he didn't have in the first film, now that he has something to prove.  While the film has it's soap opera elements, it has a lot of heart and humour.  We care what happens to these people.  It also works as a sequel, because it continues and expands on the story of the first film.

Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) and Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone) duke it out in Rocky II