ZURICH, Switzerland – Oscar-winning director Roman Polanski apologizes to  the woman he sexually assaulted when she was a 13-year-old girl in a new  documentary that premiered Tuesday night at the Zurich Film Festival.
"She is a double victim: my victim and a victim of the press," he said in  Laurent Bouzereau's "Roman Polanski: A Film Memoir," according to the Hollywood  Reporter.
The Franco-Polish director was charged in 1977 for giving Samantha Geimer,  who was 13 at the time, champagne and drugs during a photo shoot at the  Hollywood home of actor Jack Nicholson.
The then 43-year-old filmmaker then had sex with her despite her  protests.
Polanski pleaded guilty to unlawful intercourse as part of a plea deal in  1978, but fled the US before being sentenced. He has remained an active  filmmaker from his home base in France and has avoided extradition to the US  with limited travel.
France does not have an extradition treaty with the US.
In 2009, however, he was apprehended by Swiss authorities when he tried to  attend that year's Zurich Film Festival to receive a lifetime achievement award.  He spent 10 months there under house arrest before he was ultimately  released.
Tuesday night he received a standing ovation at the festival as he finally  accepted the award.
Polanski, 78, thanked the crowd, telling them it was "better late than  never."
"It's a strange anniversary for me, two years, day for day [since his  arrest in 2009]. … Certain parts of it I'd rather forget, but I'm happy to be  here," he added.
Polanski won an Academy Award for Best Director for his 2002 film "The  Pianist" but was unable to attend the Oscar ceremony in Los Angeles due to his  legal issues.

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