On Monday, director Roman Polanski gave a rare interview to The Hollywood Reporter, addressing charges that he drugged and raped a 13-year-old girl in 1977.

“As far as what I did: it’s over,” Polanski said.

“I pleaded guilty. I went to jail. I came back to the United States to do it, people forget about that, or don’t even know. I then was locked up here after this festival [in 2009]. So in the sum, I did about four or five times more than what was promised to me.”

On Wednesday, German actress Renate Langer, 61, publicly accused Polanski of raping her on two separate occasions in 1972, when she was 15.

“This has had an influence on all my life,” Langer told the New York Times. “I felt ashamed and embarrassed and lost and solo.”

She’s coming forward now, she said, because her parents have passed away — “my mother would have had a heart attack” — and because another woman, known only as Robin M., held a press conference last August accusing Polanski of sexually assaulting her in 1973.

Robin M. was 16 years old.

Actress Charlotte Lewis has said Polanski sexually abused her when she 16.

“We were drinking Moet and Chandon — I’ll never forget that, and I still can’t drink that Champagne to this day,” Lewis told the Daily Mail in January. “He just said very coldly, ‘If you’re not a big enough girl to have sex with me, you’re not big enough to do the screen test.’ … I’ve been so angry with some of the people in Hollywood who have spoken out in support of Polanski. Hollywood is giving the wrong message to pedophiles.”

Indeed, when it comes to Polanski — who also reportedly began a relationship with actress Nastassja Kinski when she was 15 and he was 43 — far too many in the industry have defended him.

Until now, 84-year-old Polanski and his supporters have successfully depicted his 1977 attack on 13-year-old Samantha Geimer — to which he pled guilty — as a one-off, an aberration. Polanski, who has lived lavishly in Europe for decades after fleeing the US criminal court system, is the real victim here, they say: He lost his mother in the Holocaust. He lost wife Sharon Tate and their unborn child in the savage Manson murders. He was forced to flee the States because the judge reneged on his plea deal and he’d already spent 42 days in jail. Not fair!

“Clearly, very clearly — and he’s proven this — Roman Polanski is not a predator,” Johnny Depp said in 2010. Five years prior, Mia Farrow, ostensibly all-too-familiar with accused child predators, testified on Polanski’s behalf in a libel suit. According to biographer Robert Weide, Farrow submitted a statement after Polanski’s arrest for raping Geimer describing him as “a loyal friend, important to me, a distinguished director, important to the motion picture industry, and a brave and brilliant man, important to all people.”

You’d think Roman Polanski split the atom.

Only in Hollywood could the brutal rape of a child be fantasized away.

Cate Blanchett named one of her sons after him. Hollywood awarded him the Best Director Oscar in 2003, replete with standing ovations from many, including Martin Scorsese and Meryl Streep. No matter that for legal reasons — that outstanding rape sentencing — he couldn’t attend. In 2008, HBO ran a gauzy documentary on him.

When Polanski was arrested in Zurich in 2009 in a failed attempt by the US to extradite him, more than 100 celebrities signed a petition demanding his release. These included Harrison Ford, David Lynch, Tilda Swinton, Darren Aranofsky, Penelope Cruz, Wes Anderson, and — no surprise — Woody Allen. Harvey Weinstein, another signer, now also faces public allegations of decades-long sexual harassment; it remains to be seen what fallout, if any, he will suffer.

The petition is no longer online (seems some may have regretted signing — or at least the optics), but other celebrities have vocally defended Polanski. At the time, Whoopi Goldberg infamously claimed, “It wasn’t rape-rape!” on “The View.”

Only in Hollywood could the brutal rape of a child be fantasized away. In her grand jury testimony, Geimer (then Gailey), barely a teenager, describes Polanski giving her part of a Quaalude, denying her pleas to “go home,” then raping her vaginally and anally. To read it is to weep.

Now three more accusers have come forward — and if we’ve learned anything from Anthony Weiner and Bill Cosby, more victims may be out there.

It’s long past time for Polanski, too, to become a pariah.