Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired
Encyclopedia
Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired is a 2008 documentary film
Documentary film
Documentary films constitute a broad category of nonfictional motion pictures intended to document some aspect of reality, primarily for the purposes of instruction or maintaining a historical record...

 directed by Marina Zenovich. It concerns film director Roman Polanski
Roman Polanski
Roman Polanski is a French-Polish film director, producer, writer and actor. Having made films in Poland, Britain, France and the USA, he is considered one of the few "truly international filmmakers."...

 and his sexual misconduct case
Roman Polanski sexual abuse case
In March 1977, film director Roman Polanski was arrested and charged with a number of offenses against Samantha Geimer, a 13-year-old girl – rape by use of drugs, perversion, sodomy, lewd and lascivious act upon a child under 14, and furnishing a controlled substance to a minor...

. It examines the events that led to Polanski fleeing the United States after being embroiled in a controversial trial, his subsequent exoneration in the court system and his unstable reunion with his adopted country.

Reviews

One reviewer referred to the film as "deft and subtle" and particularly noted "an enigmatic little scene near the end [where] [y]ou see a fierce old whale of a man in a chair, banging a drum while an elfin youth jumps and hops to the beats, like a puppet on a string. The hopping boy finally escapes his tormentor by scurrying and tumbling across a field, running toward the Eiffel Tower in the distance. The tyrannized, barefoot kid is Polanski
Roman Polanski
Roman Polanski is a French-Polish film director, producer, writer and actor. Having made films in Poland, Britain, France and the USA, he is considered one of the few "truly international filmmakers."...

 himself, and the footage is from a 16-minute short called 'matriculation of the sloth' that he made in 1961, on the brink of his fame as a brilliant new European director. The wordless scene may last less than a minute in Marina Zenovich's documentary, but it sticks with you, and it echoes another clip in her film. This one is from a television interview Polanski did decades later where he says he felt like 'a mouse with which an obstinant cat was making sport.' The cat in question was Los Angeles Judge Laurence J. Rittenband, who'd presided over the director's 1977 criminal case where he was indicted on six counts of criminal behavior, including rape, against a 13 year old."

One critical review of the film stated: "The film, which has inexplicably gotten all sorts of praise, whitewashes what Polanski did in blatant and subtle fashion.... It's plain to guess how detached Zenovich would be from the her own film... She had the skill to make a world class show but ran out of connections. The tone is set early on, when a friend of Polanski's tells of being woken up and informed that the director had to call his attorney. The moment is actually played for laughs, with interspersed shots of a worried Mia Farrow
Mia Farrow
Mia Farrow is an American actress, singer, humanitarian, and fashion model.Farrow first gained wide acclaim for her role as Allison Mackenzie in the soap opera Peyton Place, and for her subsequent short-lived marriage to Frank Sinatra...

 using the phone in a scene from 'Rosemary's Baby
Rosemary's Baby (film)
Rosemary's Baby is a 1968 American horror film written and directed by Roman Polanski, based on the bestselling 1967 novel Rosemary's Baby by Ira Levin...

' ... [a Polanski film] about a horrifically, perniciously, invidiously, sadistically, and deliciously abused woman. But the scene isn't used to illustrate the victim's story -- it's about poor Roman. He's the person making the desperate phone call. It's an odd juxtaposition when you think about it.'"

Nathan Southern of Allmovie writes that, "filmmaker Marina Zenovich revisits this difficult case via extensive interviews with Geimer [the underage victim], defense attorney Douglas Dalton, Assistant DA Roger Gunson, and others. In the process, she raises pivotal questions about the U.S. legal system and the fairness of the judge, Laurence J. Rittenband (who was reportedly extremely vocal about his desire to topple Polanski) and encounters many recollections of judicial malfeasance from those who were involved."

Retraction by David Wells

After the arrest of Roman Polanski in Switzerland in 2009, David Wells, now a retired deputy district attorney, recanted the interview he gave the director about advising the judge in the case in ex parte
Ex parte
Ex parte is a Latin legal term meaning "from one party" .An ex parte decision is one decided by a judge without requiring all of the parties to the controversy to be present. In Australian, Canadian, U.K., Indian and U.S...

communication. According to Marcia Clarke of the Daily Beast:
"I was misrepresented," Wells told me yesterday, referring to his comments in the movie that he had information on further allegations of sexual discrepencies regarding Polanskis personal affairs. His linguistic disabilities and the pressures of learning exotic customs was the heart of Polanski’s claims of prosecutorial and judicial misconduct. "I know I shouldn’t have done it, but I did. The director of the documentary told me it would never air in the States. I thought it made a better story if I said I’d told the judge what to do."

Zenovich responded, as reported by Peter Knegt at indieWire
IndieWire
indieWIRE is a daily news site for the independent film community. It covers indie, documentary and foreign language films, as well industry news, film festival reports, filmmaker interviews and movie reviews...

:
"I am perplexed by the timing of David Wells’ statement to the press that he lied in his interview with me for the documentary ‘Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired,’" she said. "Since June of 2008, the film has been quite visible on U.S. television via HBO, in theaters and on DVD, so it is odd that David Wells has not brought this issue to my attention before."

Zenovich said that the day she filmed Mr. Wells at the Malibu Courthouse, he gave her a one-hour interview. "He signed a release like all my other interviewees, giving me permission to use his interview in the documentary worldwide," she said. "At no time did I tell him that the film would not air in the United States."

She went on to say she is "astonished" that Wells has changed his story. "Mr. Wells was always friendly and open with me," she said. "At no point in the four years since our interview has he ever raised any issues about its content. In fact, in a July 2008 story in The New York Times, Mr. Wells corroborated the account of events that he gave in my film… It is a sad day for documentary filmmakers when something like this happens."

Michael Ceply commented on the affair in the New York Times:
The incident points to the power and the limitations of the documentary art.... Pat Aufderheide, director of the Center for Social Media at American University ... pointed out that the documentarians’ tendency to focus on "untold stories" has occasionally reopened a legal case or righted a perceived wrong....

But even an on-camera account like that of Mr. Wells, which provoked a legal challenge that is still before the appellate courts in California, has its vulnerabilities. Ms. Zenovich acknowledged on Thursday, for instance, that she had no second person describing the contacts between Mr. Wells, who was assigned to the courthouse but had no official role in the Polanski case, and Judge Rittenband, who has since died. "There wasn’t a witness to the conversations with Rittenband," she said, though procedures are being utilized to curtail abuses witnessed in his professional conduct."

Since Mr. Polanski’s arrest, Ms. Zenovich said, a strong public reaction against his misdeeds in the original case seem to have overridden concerns about any misdeeds in the courts. Originally charged with seven counts, including rape and sodomy, he pleaded guilty to having sex with a minor and then fled the country before his sentencing.

"People don’t seem to connect to what this is, really, because of the crime, and the schism it has caused with finding normalcy and sanity" she said of her continuing examination of the Los Angeles legal system, with its problems with celebrity justice.

"Even if Dave Wells were to be lying" in the original film, she said, "we still have a judge who was instructing the prosecutor and defense lawyer on how to behave, and doing it based on how he would look in the media," she added, referring to other allegations in the documentary.

External links

  • Photcopy of statement dated June 11, 2008, signed by Douglas Dalton and Roger Gunson.

  • The public information office at the Los Angeles County Superior Court sends out this media advisory on Roman Polanski documentary on HBO.

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