Reporters focus on Polanski’s film, not his crime, at Venice
VENICE, Italy — Roman Polanski is not at the Venice International Film Festival, but his new film, “An Officer and a Spy” is.
Yet, after much hand-wringing over its inclusion among the films in competition for the Golden Lion award, journalists at a news conference Friday stayed focused on the film itself, a true story about the wrongful persecution of French officer Alfred Dreyfus in 1894, and not the director’s past.
Polanski fled the U.S. after pleading guilty to unlawful sex with a 13-year-old girl and has been a fugitive for more than 40 years. Although he continued making films with prominent actors and his 2002 film “The Pianist” won multiple Oscars, Hollywood’s acceptance of Polanski has waned in the #MeToo era. He was even expelled from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 2018, after 50 years of membership.
“An Officer and a Spy” premiered Friday at Venice on the Lido. The audience at the first screening applauded enthusiastically, as did many reporters at the news conference when the producers and cast, including actress Emmanuelle Seigner, who has been married to Polanski since 1989, walked into the room.