Roman Polanski: A Film Memoir (2011)

7.1/10
91% – Critics
76% – Audience

Roman Polanski: A Film Memoir Storyline

A documentary about Roman Polanski, the man and filmmaker. Roman Polanski speaks about his eventful life story and career in conversation with Andrew Braunsberg, his former business partner, producer, and friend of many years.

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Roman Polanski: A Film Memoir Movie Reviews

A life that has spun out of control…

This 90 minute interview, made by a dear friend of Roman Polanski, is especially geared towards the (out of control) personal circumstances Roman Polanski had to live in for all of his life.

The good: the relaxed setting in which these 2 friends are chatting during this interview, creates several emotional moments for Roman Polanski, which would not have occurred, if this had been any other neutral journalist. Roman Polanski is at total ease in this interview and that relaxed mood makes for a very interesting, personal interview.

Any bad? This movie doesnt mention too much about his directing work and is mostly focussed on his personal life: his escape from death during worldwar 2, where he lost his pregnant mother. During the seventies he lost his pregnant wife, due to the horrible Charlie Manson killings. After that he got besieged by the media for a rape trial of a minor fotomodel, who has forgiven him by now, but which judicial consequences still hunt him to this very day.

Admired in Europe, despised in the Usa, Roman Polanski’s personal problems have made him more (in)famous than his directing job could have ever done. Although Polanski himself would like to be remembered for making “The Pianist”, which is a story about his youth during World War 2, I would like recommend for you the brilliant detective-noir callled “Chinatown” with Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway.

Roman Polanski: A Film Memoir

Andrew Braunsberg, Pokanski’s business partner and friend interviews him about his life, including his time in the Warsaw ghettos as a child, the murder of his wife – Sharon Tate, his charge of statutory rape and of course his film career.

More about Polanski’s life and the sometime impact it has had on him films, rather than an analysis of his work. This is a quite revealing portrait of a man who has had more than his fair share of tragedy and controversy. His comes across as intelligent, very open and honest and actually rather good company who has been through the ringer.

A Great Documentary

Other critics have commented on the way in which interviewer Andrew Braunsberg gives Polanski a relatively easy ride over the incident that defined his career; his arrest in the late Seventies for having sex with an underage girl. What this film suggests is that Polanski has 'done his time,' so to speak for the crime; not only was he prevented from re- entering the United States, but he was detained for several months in a Swiss jail before being finally released. In truth ROMAN POLANSKI: A MEMOIR is less preoccupied with this single incident and more with Polanski's harrowing childhood as he grew up in a Poland overrun by Nazis, faced the indignities of seeing his mother, father and sister taken away; lived in a ghetto provided by the Nazi for Jews in Poland; and then ran away just in the nick of time from a Nazi soldier shooting at him for fun. After a fledgling career as an actor, Polanski went to film school and released his first major work in 1962. Even when he achieved fame, tragedy dogged him; his second wife Sharon Tate was brutally murdered by Charles Manson, simply for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. While Braunsberg is a sympathetic interviewer, he does not skate over these harrowing details in Polanski's life; for his part, Polanski responds to the questions as comprehensively as he can, even though some of the memories of his life are still hard for him to endure. ROMAN POLANSKI: A MEMOIR allows the director to speak with the minimum of intervention; a few title-cards fill in the gaps not covered by the interview. Definitely required viewing for anyone interested in the career of the great director, as well as those concerned with film history in Europe.