Tag: Michael Jackson (Page 3 of 6)

Renew! Renew!

No, I’m not reminding you about your subscription to Better Homes and Gardens but merely suggesting that you check out Glenn Kenny‘s amusing post today about “Logan’s Run,” Jenny Agutter, and a certain key moment in the lives of young males in the days of a more forgiving MPAA. And, though I still a bit punchy after my epic look at the Scream Awards yesterday (which I’m still correcting punctuation errors and typos in), there is movie news to recount as second, third and fourth lives for news stories seem to be the theme of the day.

logans_run_001

* SettingĀ  a movie going record shouldn’t be too hard to pull off if you’re one of the world’s most famous, talented, and bizarrely controversial pop stars and the memory of your unexpected death is still fresh in everyone’s mind. It’s even easier if you open your movie on a Tuesday. However, it sure seems that critics and audiences mostly agree that “This is It” delivers the goods and that the Jackson shows really would have been remarkable. Given all that, I think we can agree that yesterday’s $2.2. million is only the beginning.

I also want to direct your attention to Roger Ebert’s extremely positive review in which he wonders aloud about Jackson’s ability to perform on an extremely high level while apparently shot full of drugs. Frequent readers of Ebert will have long sensed that addiction is a topic he has some first-hand experience with (he confirmed it recently when he came out as a recovering alcoholic), so this is an especially poignant read.

* I meant to post this on Monday, but Joe Mozingo of the L.A. Times put together a pretty excellent run-down on the entire Roman Polanski debacle. I have some relatively minor differences with certain aspects of the article, but on the whole this is the best round-up of the actual information on the case that I’ve read and is appropriately tough and factual. One interesting fact that I’d actually forgotten in all this: the victim herself has said on television of the crime that “It wasn’t a rape.” You can speculate on her reasons for saying that, but perhaps people should have been a bit less hysterical in their criticism of Whoopi Goldberg over her notorious statement. You’d think she’d committed “rape-rape,” when a certain amount of confusion about this case is actually pretty natural. My single favorite word in this piece: “alleged.”

* Another story that keeps renewing, Variety gives us the upside of ten Best Picture nominees and a second life for lesser known classic era Univerasl horror flicks too. Very nice.

* Anne Thompson argues for a second chance and a “serious release” for “Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans.” I’m not a fan of the original movie, but she makes Werner Herzog’s more humorous take sound infinitely preferable to the rather pretentious original by Abel Ferrara.

* Speaking of second chances, the inspired comedy of “Black Dynamite” is in bad, bad trouble. It’s not just the man keeping it down, it’s sheer ignorance. See the damn movie, folks. In any case, if you wait much longer, you might not get to see it in a theater at all. That would straight up suck. And remember, we all deserve a second chance.

I’m still not sure what a kid from Hawaii was doing in South Central that fateful night, but you get the point.

Michael and Roman

In an ironic bit of counterpoint I only now noticed, just as word of Roman Polanski’s arrest in Switzerland was spreading, the 3,000 tickets available for the Los Angeles of preview “Michael Jackson’s This is It” sold out within two hours. I’m not sure what to make of this, except to say that there’s nothing like death for obtaining forgiveness from the American public for sins both real and imagined.

Anyhow, it’s no surprise at all that much ink has been spilled already on the case. David Hudson at the Auteurs Daily has done a terrific job of rounding up the coverage. He points out that one person who hasn’t been shy on weighing in on the matter is actress Debra Winger (“Terms of Endearment”) who happens to be president of the Zurich Film Festival which found itself the bait in the trap that caught Polanski.

He also points us to fairly exhaustive collation of blospopheric opinion on the matter conducted by Carl Franzen of the Atlantic Wire. I will say that the only thing that really bothers me about anyone’s reaction to the news is the way some want to make this highly complicated case extremely simple and act as if there’s no difference at all between statutory rape, forcible rape, and child molestation/rape — as if confessing to one makes you guilty of all.

Though just exactly how bad it was will never be known to anyone who wasn’t there, there’s no question but that what Polanski did was reprehensible. However, lots of people do reprehensible things and they don’t all go to jail for it, nor should they always. Just because someone may be a great artist doesn’t grant them any kind of moral license, but at the same time we should not judge anyone solely by their very worst actions.

I still can’t watch this scene without seriously covering my eyes a little.

Michael Jackson – This is It

The trailer for “This is It” premiered during the VMA awards Sunday and has been circulating since. The movie will be released for two weeks only, starting on October 28 and tickets willl go on sale an entire month early. It will consist of rehearsal and documentary footage primarily recorded at two Los Angeles area indoor stadiums (The Forum in Inglewood and the Staples Center downtown) documenting the preparations for Michael Jackson’s planned series of extravagant, Cirque du Soliel-style shows in London.

Michael Jackson’s This Is It

This trailer is cut way too fast for my taste and I feel almost certain the movie will be on the maudlin side, but I have to say that the footage of the actual show I’ve seen so far has surprised and impressed me. I had made some incorrect assumptions about where Jackson was creatively. Even if new music apparently eluded him since 2001, his dancing and sense of showmanship seems to have been more than intact in the days prior to his death.

Looking backward

A few more items with a retro cast, starting with a sad one.

* It’s simply too big a show business and media story not to mention that the death of Michael Jackson has been ruled a homicide. Though you can argue that it shouldn’t be more than a legal story, there’s really no underestimating the pop-cultural impact of something like this. Certainly, it won’t be lowering the temperature around the upcoming movie built around Jackson’s last performances.

* On a far more pleasant note, Anne Thompson has casting news on Andrew Stanton’s upcoming non-Pixar film of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ “John Carter of Mars.” I’m not familiar with most of the names, but Samantha Morton is definitely cool with me.

* Anne Thompson also posted a trailer that I’m borrowing below for Christopher Nolan’s new film with Leonardo DiCaprio, “Inception.” Ms. Thompson calls it a “mind movie.” I wonder if everyone doing well in Hollywood from studio heads to head waiters shouldn’t just tithe to the estate of Phillip K. Dick without whom we’d have none of the film’s in this subgenre would exist. If ever a writer’s impact was underestimated in his own lifetime, he’d be the guy.

Michael Jackson movie deal finalized

I’m sure I’ll be seeing the film, but something about this makes me feel unclean, and I’m not even sure exactly why. I’m sure it’ll be a hell of a show.

I certainly can’t disagree with Nikki Finke’s characterization below:

Randy Phillips, president and CEO of AEG Live, ghoulishly boasted to The Associated Press he had “more than 100 hours of footage that could be turned into live albums, a movie and a pay-per-view special. He was our partner in life and now he’s our partner in death.”

Some of the footage will be in 3-D. According to Variety, like the unpresented Jackson show, the film will be directed by Kenny Ortega (“High School Musical,” “Newsies.”)

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