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| Release Date: | Jan 2008 |
|---|---|
| Genre: | Documentary |
| Awards: | 1 win & 2 nominations |
| Runtime: | 99 min. |
| Cast: | Istvan Bajzat (Himself), Steve Barshop (Himself), Marilyn Beck (Herself), Madeline Bessmer (Herself), Pierre-André Boutang (Himself), Andrew Braunsberg (Himself), Richard Brenneman (Himself), Michael Caine (Himself (archive footage)), Dick Cavett (Himself (archive footage)), Furnell Chatman (Himself (archive footage)), Joan Collins (Herself (archive footage)), Michael M. Crain (Himself), Douglas Dalton (Himself (also archive footage)), Faye Dunaway ((archive footage)), Mia Farrow (Herself), Samantha Geimer (Herself), Jim Grodin (Himself), Robin Groth (Himself (archive footage)), Roger Gunson (Himself), Gene Gutowski (Himself), Russell Harty (Himself (archive footage)), Hugh M. Hefner (Himself (archive footage)), Clive James (Himself), Ken Jones (Himself (archive footage)), Hawk Koch (Himself), Hanna Landy (Herself), Dr. Ronald Markman (Himself), Daniel Melnick (Himself), Hans Mollinger (Himself), Jack Nicholson ((archive footage)), Barbara Parkins (Herself (archive footage)), Roman Polanski (Himself (archive footage)), Claus Preute (Himself), Elliot Rittenband (Himself - Nephew), Laurence J. Rittenband (Himself (archive footage)), Marlene Roden (Herself), Marv Ryver (Himself (archive footage)), Jay Sebring (Himself (archive footage)), Lorenzo Semple Jr. (Himself), Fred Sidewater (Himself), Lawrence M. Silver (Himself (as Lawrence Silver)), Anthea Sylbert (Herself), Sharon Tate (Herself (archive footage)), Stephen S. Trott (Himself (archive footage)), Diane Tschekaloff (Herself), Philip Vannatter (Himself), Mike Wallace (Himself (archive footage)), David Wells (Himself) |
In 1977, Roman Polanski was arrested in Los Angeles on charges he gave drugs and had sex with a 13-year-old girl he was photographing for Vogue. Eleven months later, having pled guilty to one count, he fled to Europe before sentencing. This film examines that year-long period, using archival footage of the media frenzy and of Polanski's life before the charges, clips from his films, and contemporary interviews with many of the principles - attorneys, the victim, and Polanski's friends and associates. Polanski remains enigmatic, but portraits emerge of the machinations of justice and of a judge more interested in his image than his word or the law.
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