Friday, October 02, 2009THE TRUTH: WANTED AND DESIRED![]() In a week of stories surrounding Roman Polanski's arrest in Zurich on a warrant for his three decade old conviction on a sex charge involving a 13-year-old girl in the U.S. and retired prosecutor David Wells's sudden admission that he fabricated the comments he made in Marina Zenovich's documentary Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired, it got me thinking of Zenovich's answer to our yearly question to Sundance directors the year she screened the film there in 2008. The question: "If you had 10 percent more of anything, what would it be and why?" I wish I’d had a 10 percent better understanding and insight into the case when I started the movie. It was one of my favorite answers that year as her honesty highlights the challenges documentary filmmakers have in attempting to find truth while at the same time befriending the subjects they're interviewing to get to that goal. Zenovich (who's currently in Zurich filming a follow-up documentary on Polanski) has since responded to Wells's retraction. I am perplexed by the timing of David Wells' statement to the press that he lied in his interview with me for my Polanski documentary. 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 Wells has not brought this issue to my attention before. So, should this week's developments be a cautionary tale for doc filmmakers on how they should approach their subjects or is this just the risk one takes when covering a subject that is decades old with few key figures still living to corroborate stories? Comments (0) |
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