While I strongly agree with this observation, for me this is not a virtue at all. He's a serial rapist, and my take would be that his films reflect what he's interested in, which is raping people and deriving sadistic pleasure from the impact it has on his victims. To my mind, rape isn't his artistic legacy, it's always and only his traumatic legacy on his victims, and his highly visible and successful films about rape and about false accusations of rape, lauded as sensitive and artistic (and even perhaps a price worth paying for not having him brought to justice), are part of that attack on his victims. The most obvious example would be making Tess, a movie about a 17-year-old Nastassja Kinski victimized by rape, as his first film as a fugitive from conviction for rape.greg x wrote: ↑Thu Apr 23, 2020 6:14 am Rape and its consequences along with paranoia of accusation are constantly reoccurring in Polanski's work, dwelled on over and over again with such attention paid to the methods of victimization and dotingly detailed observation of its victims that calling his films masochistic, as some do, doesn't quite do justice the obsessive investment in creating these scenes over and over again. "Rape", in various forms, is Polanski's defining theme and there isn't any director who captures it as totally as he does. Both a perpetrator and victim, rape will also be his defining artistic legacy.
Incidentally, I'm not seeing anything that reports that Polanski was a victim of rape, but I would be interested to know if he was. I do certainly know that he had an awful, traumatic childhood as a Polish Jew under Nazi occupation.