The Michael Jackson Documentary That Shook the World Has Vanished - Slate magazine broken-clocking it in review of "Leaving Neverland" sequel

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The Michael Jackson Documentary That Shook the World Has Vanished​


The sequel to Leaving Neverland is here, but the original is nowhere in sight.​


When Leaving Neverland premiered on HBO a little over six years ago, the two-part, four-hour documentary sparked a long-overdue reckoning with the legacy of Michael Jackson. Composed largely of interviews with two men, Wade Robson and James Safechuck, who say that Jackson repeatedly sexually abused them when they were children, the movie seemed to be the tipping point after nearly three decades of rumors, investigations, and out-of-court settlements, prompting a flood of media coverage that included more than a dozen articles in Slate alone. The #MeToo movement had, it seemed, inaugurated a cultural sea change. The rich and famous were no longer considered innocent by default, and their accusers were not immediately suspect. We would never see MJ the same way again.

Leaving Neverland 2: Surviving Michael Jackson, director Dan Reed’s sequel to his bombshell documentary, was released on Tuesday. But this time, it was greeted with virtual silence. Whereas the first movie premiered at the Sundance Film Festival to a room packed with journalists, the second simply popped up on YouTube, less than a month after the entertainment industry trades broke the news of its existence. As of midafternoon Friday, it had 38,000 views.

At a little over 53 minutes, Leaving Neverland 2 is more of an update than a self-contained work, mostly covering Robson and Safechuck’s attempts to pursue legal action against Jackson’s estate in the years since the first movie aired. But if you’re looking to refresh your memory of the original film, you’ll have to make do with the new one’s brief excerpts, because Leaving Neverland effectively no longer exists, at least in the U.S. Relying on a nondisparagement clause in a deal to air a 1992 concert, Jackson’s estate sued HBO for breach of contract, and after five years in court, the network agreed to a settlement that included permanently removing the movie from its Max streaming platform; although Leaving Neverland was released on DVD, the disc is now out of print, and a used copy is nearly $100 on eBay. (In an unexpected twist, you can still stream the film in the U.K., where plaintiff-friendly libel laws usually make it much more difficult to report on public figures, and the second part was broadcast on Channel 4 this week.) MJ, the stage musical based on Jackson’s life, was nominated for 10 Tonys and is now in its fourth year on Broadway; the Cirque du Soleil spectacle set to his music is still running in Las Vegas; and a Hollywood biopic, directed by Training Day’s Antoine Fuqua, has already been filmed, though its release date is uncertain. #MeToo has become #NeverMind.

On its own, Leaving Neverland 2 is, unfortunately, not much to speak of. At Sundance, Reed said that he shot interviews with attorneys on both sides of the case but opted not to use them, focusing exclusively on Robson, Safechuck, and the families. In the sequel, lawyers take center stage. Vince Finaldi and John Manly, whose California practice specializes in civil litigation related to sexual abuse, ably guide us through the basis of their lawsuit, which alleges that the companies Jackson formed to manage his affairs should be held liable for his actions even after his death. But while they convey a sense of dedication to the cause, they can’t be as compelling as Jackson’s alleged victims themselves.

For years, Jackson and his representatives, both legal and public, have argued that his accusers are motivated solely by the desire for money. (The Hollywood biopic is reportedly mired in legal issues because its third act depicts the family of Jordan Chandler, the then-13-year-old who accused Jackson of sexual abuse in 1993, as money-grubbing opportunists.) And they’ve pointed to the fact that Robson and Safechuck both defended Jackson in court. Leaving Neverland devotes a good chunk of its length to explaining why they lied under oath, and although the sequel repeats that explanation in truncated form, it takes time to walk an audience through the emotional logic of defending your alleged abuser, time this brief addendum doesn’t have. As for being in it for the money: With Jackson dead, there aren’t many avenues for justice available to his alleged victims except for the monetary rewards of a civil judgment and the attendant public vindication. And even if their motivations are financial, his estate’s seem unlikely to be less so—especially since megastars like Jackson are most profitable when they’re reinjected into the culture over and over again, and that’s a lot harder to do when the good feelings associated with their songs become associated with a toxic personal brand.

That’s why the most fascinating part of Leaving Neverland 2 has almost nothing to do with Robson and Safechuck. After years of failing to get an on-camera response from Jackson’s estate or his family, Reed turns instead to his fans, who are as much the guardians of his legacy as anyone who holds the rights. Most take Jackson’s side, of course, with one suggesting that Leaving Neverland, which went to almost unbearable lengths to describe when and how Jackson allegedly abused his victims, didn’t go into enough specifics to be convincing. (A clearly stunned Reed asks, off camera, “That wasn’t detailed enough for you?”) But one, a middle-aged Black man identified only as “Z,” says that watching the original documentary set him on a path of questioning and reinvestigating everything he thought he knew. And when he dug around, he says, “I didn’t like what I saw.” It’s a reminder of how powerful the impact of Leaving Neverland was, and of how ominous it is that, at a time when media access is under the near-total control of streaming conglomerates, it’s possible for a movie of such historic and cultural importance to simply disappear.
 
depicts the family of Jordan Chandler, the then-13-year-old who accused Jackson of sexual abuse in 1993, as money-grubbing opportunists
They are. The boys were probably molested, but their fame-chasing greedy families all but pimped them out to Jackson.

He had a bunch of boys coming to Neverland for sleepovers, whose mothers were all too happy to have them sleeping in a bedroom with a famous rich man. It seems implausible that this was innocent for a middle aged man. But some parents will do anything for fame.
 
Michael Jackson was a weird guy given social godhood at 5 years old. He was weird and mentally stunted from all the abuse the guy got from his shitbag clout chasing father trying to squeeze every dime he could out of him before his star faded. His falsetto exists in part because his father abused him because puberty took away the youthful voice that made the Jackson 5 a household name.

My opinion on this has swung back and forth for the last 20ish years, but I don't think he molested any child. Two families saw an extremely easy payday and took the chance to make millions off the world's biggest pop star. The news media also saw an extremely huge, easy payday from documenting the Fall from Grace story to end all Fall from Grace stories: Michael Jackson, the King of Pop... a child molester?!?!.

All the constant flipflopping from the families, the holes in their stories, the sheer amount of mental illness in the parents' actions, etc basically solidified to me that they were full of shit, but Jackson and his legal team were too incompetent to take a solid stand to the media, so he got buried under 15 years of "hurr hurr what if the heehee moonwalker guy was a pedophile" right up until the day he died.

Martin Bashir should kill himself. He's the perfect example of the evils of journalism, it's all tabloid garbage at the end of the day, even for a "respected" publication like the BBC.
 
Why is this guy the one hollywood rapist everyone defends? He had a shitty fucking childhood, but so did Roman Polanski. Just because you get your victims delivered directly by their retarded parents doesn't make it not rape. I don't know how else those kids knew what his dick and birthmarks looked like.
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All the constant flipflopping from the families, the holes in their stories, the sheer amount of mental illness in the parents' actions, etc basically solidified to me that they were full of shit, but Jackson and his legal team were too incompetent to take a solid stand to the media, so he got buried under 15 years of "hurr hurr what if the heehee moonwalker guy was a pedophile" right up until the day he died.

Pedophiles are who they are, they take pleasure in the interest of children specifically and often value the power dynamic/innocence lost aspect. Under that, I don't think Jackson was a pedophile, he comes across as way too mentally and psychologically stunted to be a pedo. (The 2003 grocery video is one example of that).

This is why I don't disagree that he was fucked up in his head, he wasn't a monster but a tragic figure who needed to be tard wrangled 24/7.
 
This is why I don't disagree that he was fucked up in his head, he wasn't a monster but a tragic figure who needed to be tard wrangled 24/7.
When I heard he had died? I was almost relieved, the endless trainwreck was finally over..... before the pedo accusations hit? The thing that made me ill was the constant plastic surgery he kept going through, that nobody stepped in to stop. That told me he was out of control, and like the last days of Elvis? Kept alive by an entourage that just wanted access to easy money and a mansion to crash at as long as they kept doing what the star wanted and kept him happy in his self-destruction..... it could only ever end one way for him....... he was gonna die in the "care" of some enabling doctor/specialist. And that's what happened.
 
I consider it a point in MJ's favor that the Culkins (not just Macaulay, but Kieran and some of the other siblings who stayed at Neverland) and Corey Feldman have consistently maintained that they were never molested by him. Finding Neverland implies that M. Culkin must have been molested as a matter of course given his closeness to Jacko, but Culkin has always steadfastly denied it. Maybe he has professional or personal reasons for covering it all up, but I've always found him credible.

Not to mention the fact that Wade Robson testified during the 2005 trial that MJ had never molested him. He was either lying then (under oath!) or he's lying now. At any rate, it's interesting that all of these kids who slept over with MJ (Safechuck, Robson, the Culkins) turned out to be relatively normal, heterosexual dudes with stable family lives. (Feldman is a mess, but I don't think you can blame MJ for that one.) You figure at least one of them would have taken the sodomite pill after being buggered by the King of Pop.
 
Is there any actual evidence that MJ was a pedo, or did he simply know too much and had to be thrown under the bus? I guess now is as good as time to revive this discussion as any.
The whole "giving children alcohol, and those drunk children being able to perfectly describe his genitals" part

Also you can find Leaving Neverland pretty easily on torrent sites.
 
Not to mention the fact that Wade Robson testified during the 2005 trial that MJ had never molested him.
Safechuck claimed he was molested in a building that wasn't even built until well after the age he claimed the molestation stopped. His lawyer tried to spin it as him misremembering, but it's a more than five year change to the timeline and put everything else he said in doubt.

It's possible there was something to it, because lol hollywood weirdo, but they picked the absolute least credible witnesses to run the claims with. The severe liability issues surrounding these people is why the doco was removed from distribution.
 
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