2 - The Dark Side of ‘the Good Life’: California and the Birth of Modern Horror
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 July 2023
Summary
Chinatown (1974) is one of the bleakest films about California ever made. Like other 1970s neo-noir films, as Erik Dussere notes, it ‘interrogated and undermined the noir detective genre, self-consciously incorporating references to classic hardboiled films while constructing stories in which detectives are unable to solve the case or become unwitting pawns in a larger plot’. In Chinatown, the ‘larger plot’ in which fast-thinking private investigator J. J. Gittes (Jack Nicholson) finds himself embroiled pertains to the future of Los Angeles.
Chinatown screenwriter, Robert Towne, was inspired by a historical episode detailed in Carey McWilliams's Southern California: An Island on the Land (1946). The ‘Owens Valley Tragedy’ began when the city of Los Angeles deliberately created a drought to encourage citizens to vote for the construction of an aqueduct. But as Sam Wasson outlines:
rather than supply the City of Los Angeles with the water it had paid twentyfive million dollars for, the masterminds brought the aqueduct only as far as the north end of the San Fernando Valley, a hundred thousand acres of which they had clandestinely bought up a year earlier. The newly irrigated land, which they had purchased for a song, netted them an estimated profit of one hundred million dollars. They got rich, but the citizens of Los Angeles were robbed, Owens Valley land workers lost their livelihoods, hundreds of acres were decimated, and ‘the rape of Owens Valley’, as McWilliams put it, persisted unvanquished. The bad guys won.
Chinatown's chief villain is land developer Noah Cross (John Huston), who lives outside the city in a pretty ranchero-style property. Gittes, who has uncovered Cross's murderous scheme, asks the old man why he is going to all this trouble: ‘Why are you doing it? How much better can you eat? What could you buy that you can't already afford?’ Cross defiantly responds: ‘The future, Mr Gittes! The future!’
Cross is not only an immensely corrupt and powerful figure whose crimes will shape the material infrastructure of Southern California for generations to come. He is also the unrepentant rapist of his tormented daughter, Evelyn (Faye Dunaway), and the father of her child. Money, political clout and the inherent corruption of the young city mean that Cross is not only free to do whatever he likes in a business capacity: he can also engage in consequence-free acts of murder and incest.
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- The California Gothic in Fiction and Film , pp. 69 - 112Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2022