Sam Wasson's "The Big Goodbye" on the making of "Chinatown"...

Sam Wasson's "The Big Goodbye" on the making of "Chinatown" suffers from lack of input from the film's stars. Credit: TNS/Macmillan

THE BIG GOODBYE: "Chinatown" and the Last Years of Hollywood by Sam Wasson (Flatiron Books, 400 pp., $28.99)

As you get about two-thirds of the way through "The Big Goodbye," Sam Wasson's breezy, cocaine-dusted history of Roman Polanski's 1974 film "Chinatown," you may wonder: How would it be different if Faye Dunaway had agreed to an interview with Wasson?

Dunaway, an easy target in recent years, continues to be in "The Big Goodbye," which emphasizes her tardiness and unpredictability. But, reading between the lines, it's hard not to wonder what it was like to be virtually the only woman on set, one whose director disliked her and whose key scene is of her being smacked in the face repeatedly by her co-star, Jack Nicholson. Wasson didn't speak with him, either.
And there are other gaps in the book, which bases an analysis of the 1975 Oscars on "Cabaret" having beaten "The Godfather" for best picture in 1973 (it didn't), which gives "Chinatown" screenwriter Robert Towne's ex-wife an oversized role because she agreed to talk and which seems to have been overhauled in editing. For example, a punch line about Polanski's skiing only makes sense when you get to the setup for the joke 50 pages later.

Wasson, whose biography of Bob Fosse is riveting, makes interesting observations about 1970s moviemaking, but The Big Goodbye" reads like a book by a writer/researcher who too often was forced to write around missing material and say, "Forget it, Jake. It's Chinatown."
 

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