Showing posts with label Roman Polanski Documentary: "A Film Memoir". Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roman Polanski Documentary: "A Film Memoir". Show all posts

Sunday, May 20, 2012

The first reviews of Polanski's new Memoir Film are being released
...and they're not too positive.
Cannes Reporter - Sharon Waxman - May 17, 2012 :

If you didn’t like Roman Polanski before, you’re not going to like him any better after seeing him tell his life story in “Roman Polanski: A Film Memoir.”

Producer Andrew Braunsberg, one of the director’s closest friends, sits with him to talk through an extraordinary life: a childhood torn to shreds by the Holocaust, a film career in Poland, his marriage to Sharon Tate and her murder by the Manson clan, his rape of Samantha Geimer and the media circus aftermath and his life in exile, capped by arrest in Switzerland in 2009 after an extradition request by the Los Angeles district attorney.

It’s enough twists and turns to make anyone gasp. Yet Polanski recounts these events with calm and humor and a sense of intelligent perspective.

All that doesn’t help. It still feels self-serving.

On the heels of the far more probing – and useful -- documentary by Marina Zenovich last year, “Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired,” this “Film Memoir” resonates more like a home movie than a doc.

In the hands of a more disinterested interviewer, the film might have uncovered the real person behind the competing mythologies.

Who is Roman Polanski? This is his version of himself. Notably missing is the Polanski whose life is an emblem of the cultural upheaval of the '60s and '70s – both the Helter Skelter murders that helped end the era of peace and love, and the drug-and-sex fuelled party that followed, of which he was a part.

Polanski is moved to tears by things that may be new to us – his father’s return to the family bosom during Nazi deportations; his mother’s dispatch to Auschwitz where she died.

But he is composed when talking about Sharon Tate’s murder, and equanimous when talking about the Geimer rape and his treatment by the legal system (the Zenovich documentary showed that the judge reneged on an agreement for Polanski to get probation with time served).

If Polanski does not visibly wallow in self-pity – and he may have cause to do so – he also does not spend time on self-reflection. He is far too proud, even if one feels his deep intelligence in all his comments. Only late in the film does he allow that “of course it was wrong” what he did, and calls Geimer a “double victim,” for enduring the media gauntlet.

The tendentious Braunsberg – who was sitting beside Polanski when the director got the call about Sharon Tate saying, “They’re all dead” -- doesn't allow an uncomfortable moment. Neither does director Laurent Bouzereau.

Like everything else in Polanski’s life, reactions to this new documentary will be bifurcated: the French will love him all the more as a victimized genius. Americans will think he’s concocted a tendentious piece of drivel to excuse his past.
Neither are right. And both are.
Submitted by Venus.  Thanks Venus.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Polanski Issues first Public Apology
for having Unlawful Sex with a Minor
An in-depth documentary about director Roman Polanski
is due to be given a special screening at the 65th Cannes Film Festival this May.

"Roman Polanski: A Film Memoir", is based on interviews made with the director while he was under house arrest in Gstaad, Switzerland, in 2009 and 2010.

The documentary, made by French film-maker Laurant Bouzereau, contains Polanski's first public apology for having unlawful sex with a minor, the 1977 incident that prompted the director to flee America.

Polanski flew to France before being sentenced for the crime, ultimately leading to his arrest in Switzerland forty years later.

“She is a double victim: my victim and a victim of the press,” the director says in the film.

In spite of later being freed by Swiss authorities owing to errors in America's extradition request, Polanski is still wanted in the US.

In the documentary, Polanski talks about his childhood in the wartime Jewish Ghetto created in Krakow by the occupying German authorities.

The director also provides insights into the 1969 Manson Murders, which saw the slaying of his pregnant wife, Sharon Tate in the couple's Hollywood home, along with several friends.

Besides the documentary, the festival will be showing Tess, Polanski's 1979 adaptation of Thomas Hardy's novel Tess of the d'Urbervilles, with the director himself due to attend the screning.

Polanski has himself won the top award at Cannes - the Palme d'Or - for his 2002 Holocaust drama The Pianist.

The festival begins on 16 May.

FULL STORY: http://www.thenews.pl/1/11/Artykul/97844,Polanski-documentary-to-be-screened-at-Cannes
Submitted by Katie.  Thanks Katie.