Judge âThe Pianist,â not Roman Polanski
Ah, the sweet smell of Oscar season in full bloom! Samantha Geimer, the woman who was sexually violated by âThe Pianistâ director Roman Polanski when she was a 13-year-old Valley Girl way, way back in 1977, recently popped up on ABCâs âGood Morning Americaâ and CNNâs âLarry King Live,â forgiving the director for his sins. She also penned an op-ed piece in this newspaper, gracefully saying, âNo one needs to worry about me.... Mr. Polanski and his film should be honored according to the quality of the work. I think that the academy members should vote for the movies they feel deserve it. Not for people they feel are popular.â
That was the last we saw of anything resembling goodwill. The reaction in hard-boiled Hollywood speaks volumes about why the Oscars have devolved from a classy night at the opera into a seamy murder mystery.
The question on everyoneâs lips: Who was behind Geimerâs TV appearances? Was the leading suspect âPianistâ distributor Focus Films, betting that Geimerâs forgiveness would cast Polanski in a more sympathetic light? Or was it Miramaxâs Harvey Weinstein, the dark prince of past Oscar campaigns, who somehow engineered the âGood Morning Americaâ interview (after all, conspiracy theorists say, arenât ABC and Miramax both owned by Disney?) figuring the rehashing of Polanskiâs sordid escapade would nudge voters toward Miramax candidates âChicagoâ and âGangs of New Yorkâ?
Focus Films Co-President James Schamus says his company âunequivocally had no knowledge of her appearancesâ while Miramax spokeswoman Amanda Lundberg says her company had nothing to do âin any wayâ with any Geimer appearances. There seems to be no evidence driving the rumors except the cynical view that this is a contest no different from any hardball political campaign.
Now in her late 30s, Geimer comes off as a wholesome-looking suburban soccer mom. Asked why she hasnât seen âThe Pianist,â she explained: âI donât go for dramas. Iâm more of an action-adventure or comedy [moviegoer].â She kept her poise, even when King walked her through her encounter with Polanski like a homicide detective, leeringly asking, âIt was just straight sex -- nothing else? Did he ask you to do other things?â The most poignant moment came when Geimer tried to explain why her mother had allowed a 13-year-old girl to go alone for a photo session with the rakish film director. âWe trusted him,â she said. âWe had no reason not to. He was a celebrity.â
Thatâs not to say that Geimer isnât media savvy. When King speculated that Polanski probably wouldnât even recognize her today, Geimer glanced around the TV studio and wryly replied, âHe probably would now.â
With âThe Pianistâ having emerged as a formidable best picture contender, especially after winning both film and director statuettes at the recent British and French awards ceremonies, Polanskiâs tangled life story has taken center stage again. But what has also taken center stage is an age-old debate over whether an artistâs accomplishments should be judged against his misdeeds, a debate that has divided Hollywood many times over its history.
Always a fugitive
âThe Pianist,â which features Adrien Brody as noted Polish pianist Wladyslaw Szpilman, chronicles the lethal Nazi occupation of the Warsaw Jewish ghetto, something Polanski experienced first-hand as a child.
In many ways, he has always been a fugitive. During the war he escaped through a gap in the wall of the Krakow ghetto not long before his pregnant mother was sent to the gas chambers. In 1969, after Polanskiâs pregnant wife, Sharon Tate, was murdered by the Charles Manson family, nasty insinuations by the media sent him fleeing back to Europe.
Even bastions of propriety like Time and Newsweek took relish in printing the grisly details of his wifeâs bloody demise, gossiping about her âshakyâ marriage and describing the murdersâ similarity to nightmarish scenes in Polanski movies âRepulsionâ and âRosemaryâs Baby.â After being viewed more with suspicion than sympathy in that dark hour, when Polanski got word that the judge in the Geimer case planned to throw the book at him, he opted for fugitive status again.
For anyone whoâs seen 1974âs âChinatown,â Polanski and Robert Towneâs masterful portrait of corruption in pre-war Los Angeles, revolving around an oily paterfamilias who rapes his daughter and lusts after his granddaughter, the back-room events surrounding the 1977 sex scandal have an eerie resonance. For that matter, if Polanskiâs case had gone to trial, the resulting media circus mightâve had many of the outlandish shenanigans that dominate âChicago.â
According to Geimerâs lawyer, Lawrence Silver, all parties agreed to a plea bargain allowing Polanski, who spent 42 days in jail undergoing psychological evaluation, to plead guilty to one count of having sex with a minor. âWhat the judge did was outrageous,â Silver recently explained. âHe approved the plea but [then] he called us into his chambers and said he was going to sentence Polanski, rather than for time served, to 50 years.â
When I had lunch with the late producer Howard W. Koch several years ago, he told of being in the shower room at the Hillcrest Country Club when he overheard the judge boast that he was going to put Polanski away for the rest of his life. Koch phoned Polanski to warn him and, before anyone knew it, the director had fled to Paris, abandoning his Mercedes at LAX. The Superior Court judge, Laurence J. Rittenband, staunchly denied any bias against the director but ultimately removed himself from the case.
As for Polanski, once a fugitive, always a fugitive. Ever since he fled, he has lived in exile and semi-infamy, his career in decline until being resurrected by âThe Pianistâ and its moving portrait of a man saved by his art.
âProfligate dwarfâ
Can Polanski be resurrected by his art? I realized Iâd been watching Geimerâs interviews -- and rereading her piece in The Times -- because I was wrestling with a nagging moral dilemma that I suspect has troubled many academy voters as well: How do we weigh someoneâs accomplishments against his personal misdeeds?
A tormented man who said in his autobiography, âI am widely regarded, I know, as an evil, profligate dwarf,â Polanski has been repeatedly cursed by peopleâs inability to distinguish between his art and his life. With âThe Pianistâ up for a best picture, can we judge the movie, not the man?
Itâs a question the academy has repeatedly confronted. When it comes to a disquieting penchant for underage women, no one can top Charlie Chaplin. His first two wives were 16 when they married him; he was 44 when he married the 19-year-old Paulette Godard, 54 when he married the 18-year-old Oona OâNeill. Before his final marriage, he was accused of violating the Mann Act after fathering a child with the young actress Joan Barry. After being labeled a Communist and threatened with deportation, he left the country in 1952, not to return until 1972, when the academy gave him an honorary Oscar.
Elia Kazan was given an honorary Oscar in 1999, despite having informed on his friends during a 1952 congressional hearing at the height of the same McCarthy-era Red Scare that sent Chaplin packing.
Want a more timely moral quandary? The No. 1 pop album in the country this week is R. Kellyâs âChocolate Factory.â Should you buy a copy for your kid, even though the R&B; crooner is awaiting trial on child pornography charges in two states after allegedly appearing in a home video that shows him in a sexual liaison with a young girl?
For Polanskiâs admirers, itâs the movie that matters. Warren Beatty, a longtime Polanski friend, calls âThe Pianistâ âan absolute masterwork. Neither a personal mistake nor the personal misfortunes of its creator are relevant to that.â
In recent years, the Oscars have too often become a personality parade, influenced by a tidal wave of glossy advertisements and personal campaign appearances. But if you really take the Academy Awards seriously, youâd have to argue they matter too much to be treated as a popularity contest.
Weinstein and Scott Rudin often behave like schoolyard bullies, but they make great movies, and if you believe âChicagoâ or âThe Hoursâ is the yearâs best film, give those pictures your vote. Likewise for best supporting actress candidate Catherine Zeta-Jones. So what if she sold her wedding photos to a cheesy British fanzine and is now suing another rag for printing them first? Being tacky has nothing to do with being talented.
Artists are often unhappy, dissolute, disreputable people -- read a biography of Picasso, Ernest Hemingway or Jackson Pollock and see if youâd have wanted them living next door.
The truth is that we always forgive them their transgressions because, in the end, the inspiration we find in their art outweighs our disapproval of their brutish behavior.
No one loathed Kazan more than blacklisted screenwriter Abraham Polonsky, but as he once told me, âI try not to confuse my moral hatreds with my aesthetic dislikes.â
As time passes, the personal transgressions fade into the background; the artistâs brilliance is what we cherish and remember.
Perhaps itâs too soon for Polanski to receive absolution. But after seeing âThe Pianist,â I think itâs time to put aside our qualms about his behavior and cast our vote for the best movie, even if it wasnât made by the best man.
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