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viviti

 

 

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Telecran - 1970 - Chile


Amor - 1970 - Brazil

 (Click on the photo to see the report )


Roman - 1970 - Turkey


Sucesos - August, 1970 - Mexico


Cine Revue - February, 1971 - Belgium


Fatos e Fotos -  December 16, 1971 - Brazil

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Lecturas - 1972 - Spain


Manchete - October, 1982 - Brazil

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Cosmopolitan - February, 1984

Remembering Sharon Tate by Roman Polanski


US Magazine - 1986

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(The report will be here soon)


Memories - Aug./Sept - 1989

20 Years Later


Vanity Fair - April, 1997

Polanski's Inferno


Marie Claire - February, 1998 - England

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the VOGUE book of BLONDES -  1999 - England

Cult films in the Sixties starred a host of kittenish blondes - Catherine Deneuve, Julie Christie and the incomparable Brigitte Bardot.

the sex kittens

..."The 'Swinging Sixties' crowd who first discovered voluptuous blondes like Anita Ekberg and Capucine, now admired Catherine Deneuve, in cult films like Repulsion and Les Sauvages. Other favourites were Britain's Julie Christie who starred in Billy Liar and then became stellar in Darling, Doctor Zhivago and Far From the Madding Crowd, Candice Bergen in The Group and Roman Polanski's ill-fated wife, Sharon Tate."


Allure - December, 1999

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Telewizyjna - June, 2000 - Poland


Premiere Magazine - November, 2000

Roman Polanski's Filmography

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Vanity Fair - April, 2001

Murder Most Unforgettable

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W magazine - August, 2001

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The Long-Lost Photos of Sharon Tate


Premiere Magazine - September, 2001

American Beauty


BBC News - May 27, 2002

Roman Polanski's The Pianist has won the prestigious Palme d'Or award at the Cannes Film Festival.


BBC News - March 25, 2003

Roman Polanski wins the Oscar as Best Director


Allure - July, 2003


Premiere Magazine - February 2005

“After The Pianist, which for me was extremely personal, I hesitated about what to take up,” says director Roman Polanski. “Should I do another detective story? Another comedy? I did not want to return to these things. Then, when I was playing with my kids, it hit me. I would like to do a film for them. I thought about books I had liked when I was young, and I remembered Oliver Twist.” The 71-year-old filmmaker is at least the twelfth director to adapt Charles Dickens’s beloved tale for the big screen (others include David Lean and Carol Reed). In this $60 million retelling, filmed mostly on Prague soundstages complete with cobblestone streets, Ben Kingsley stars as Fagin, London’s premier pickpocket. But it’s newcomer Barney Clark-wearing threadbare pants and a split-brimmed hat for today’s scene, in which he is released from prison- who steals the film as the orphan Oliver. It’s a role he was destined to play, says Clark: “When I was about six, everyone told me that I looked like Oliver Twist.” Sounds like he’s found the perfect home.


 


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