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Review: 'The Immigrant'Polanski's longtime producing partner Laurent Bouzereau "directs" the film, and interviews the filmmaker as well, sitting down with him in Gstaad, Switzerland during his house arrest in 2009 after he was taken into custody at the Zurich Film Festival. The structure is simple -- a couple of cameras capture the sitdown talk with Bouzereau leading the conversation, as Polanski chats about everything from his childhood to his films (he doesn't think much of "Repulsion"), but the 'film memoir' kicks off with events leading up to his house arrest. Polanski is candid about the strain it has put on him and his family, and the interview takes place with the Swiss government's decision about whether or not to extradite him still looming in the background, but as we soon learn, his bit of legal trouble barely compares to what the director has lived through.

Polanski's life of alternating tragedies and triumphs becomes a recurring theme. Riding high off the success of "Rosemary's Baby," and with his Hollywood career about to bloom, Polanski suffered the loss of Sharon Tate, murdered in a case of wrong place/wrong time by followers of Charles Manson. Polanski moves between deep sorrow at the brutal loss of Tate (he even endured voluntarily visiting the crime scene) and rage at his treatment by the police and tabloids, who printed all sorts of rumors about him and Tate, with implications of his guilt being tossed around even though he was literally an ocean away at the time. But of course, that would not be his only brush with the law.
The film caps off with his life-altering relationship with Emmanuelle Seigner, and concludes with Bouzereau visiting Polanski after the house arrest has been lifted. And the overall result is a film that captures Polanski from a perspective many have long waited for: his own. The movie is not perfect -- as thorough as he is, Bouzereau is the pic's own worst enemy, with his haughty interview style and his tendency to speak over Polanski or put words in his mouth proving somewhat grating at times. And while this isn't a documentary about his movies exactly, you do wish Polanski was as candid about the productions that didn't work (or bombed) as he is about those that were successful. But really, these are minor quibbles. That Polanski still considers himself a "glass-half-full" kind of guy is astounding, and to see the 70+ year-old director looking as fit as someone twenty years younger is remarkable. 'A Film Memoir' is a journey into the man who made the movies we love. [B]
2 Comments
Chaim Paddaman | May 22, 2012 4:34 AM
Roman Polanski apologist Jean Melkovsky writes in the Los Angeles Times: " All the existing documents emphazise " The outstanding maturity and sexual experience ot the Polanski rape victim. Melkovsky blames the physical maturity and willingness of the victim. Polanski is not a peadophile. The offence occured as an isolated instance of trasient poor judgement. Peadophiles argue that their victims asked for it, and got it.
It is common knowledge that if a child presents with promiscuous and provocative behavior, the minor will be classified as a vulnerable child, thus placed on a register for vulnerable children, and protected under statutory laws. Roman Polanski took advantage of such a child. It is amazing how liberals tend to ignore the ethics of Statutory laws when it suits them. Roman Polanski is not a great man, he is a very sick man. Jean Melkovsky can smear the victim as much as he/she likes. It won't wash..... Laurent Bouzereau involved with Steven Spielberg, interesting....................................
James | May 20, 2012 4:27 PM
Great review, can't wait to see the film. Only one quibble. Laurent Bouzereau is not Polanski's "longtime producing partner". He's a DVD special features guru who has done almost all the content for Spielberg's DVDs, DVDs of Hitchcock's films, and countless others. He doesn't produce features.