This Is It…
Posted on 17 November 2009
So, as usual, I felt really confused when looking for a movie to watch this weekend. I have a lot of thoughts about what’s happened to movies in the U.S. – the consequences of the multi-nationals taking over our industry and sucking it dry like so much else in this country (not to mention the world). But that wasn’t what was bothering me this past Saturday night. I just wanted to see something that might surprise me a little and not disappoint me completely.
I still find fishing through the web for movie info confusing and generally frustrating. I miss the days of a good old underground paper giving me real data — or a good piece of word of mouth (always the most reliable). So the fact that a friend said I should see the Michael Jackson documentary, “This Is It,” gained traction as everything else delivered to me on the Web seemed increasingly unclear and almost sad – such junk out there and it’s supposed to be the time of the “serious (Oscar contending) movies”.
So word of mouth – that’s what this piece is.
Go see “This is it.” To my utter surprise it’s one of the finest and most powerful films I’ve seen in a long time.
I was never a Michael Jackson fan. Not at all. When he was a child I found his music manipulative and muddy – he seemed like an over coiffed puppet. As he grew up he became equal parts scary and sad to me, not to mention wildly and crassly commercial. And then there were all the issues of the monster that seemed to emerge – the baby out the window, all those boys in his over-sized bed, his strange home, his face – a pop freak to the max, a ghoul.
So I went to see “This Is It” the way one might go see a horror picture, I suppose, except I hoped that there might be some okay dancing and some bizarre singing. What I encountered was an artist at the absolute top of his game – and it is an astonishing game. He emanated Greek tragedy, Keats’s-like vulnerability, but also a surgeon-like drive and clarity. Plus, he wears wild clothes, which somehow suit him and elevate him. There is a level of human beauty that is incontestable here, even as his face is a mask of surgery and skin-dye gone grotesquely awry.
I found myself literally weeping for his voice that had the depth and maturity of the finest and most complex wine, a Shakespearean wine that rose above the tragedy of what his life had become.
One of my favorite movies is “Amadeus,” and this has the tone of that movie as towards the end Mozart (played brilliantly by Tom Hulce and directed by Milos Forman) addresses his inner demons and outer enemies with music and (in this case) dance. And talk about dance — Michael Jackson surrounded himself with the finest hip-hop dancers alive for this show. The film opens with these dancers (from all over the world – many of them weeping with joy because they had been selected from hundreds of other dancers ala Chorus Line – very strange for me at what appeared to be a cloying beginning) but not for one moment during the entire film did I watch any of these other dancers. My eyes were locked on Michael, every fiber of his body emanating feelings as deep as I’ve ever seen on film.
And now he’s gone. But the movie isn’t. Don’t miss it. As a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences I haven’t yet been hammered with a campaign for “This Is It” to grab the documentary Oscar, probably because the “brilliant” studio guys think it’s not meaningful enough. Funny how real art is never considered meaningful by the money guys until it’s too late. I may have to start a campaign myself. I think this is it…
7 responses to This Is It…





All right. Have always felt as you described about MJ, but after reading that I have to see it.
I don’t have seen this yet (And I don’t think I’ll go – probably when it ‘ll be released on DVD) but after this… you put me in the mood…
I met Michael once, years ago, when he was first morphing into Diana Ross. He was a sweet guy…with issues. I won’t see the documentary, for the same reason I don’t own anything after Off the Wall. It hurts to watch him.
What makes the film so wonderful is that it admits to the hurt, deep hurt (fatal hurt, I guess, given that he died so soon after this) and yet his deep artistry embedded in pain transcends all that. It may be hard to watch (as all things that bring transcendence are) but I still think it would be worth it to see, especially on the big screen (with others) where it becomes a large communal experience. That’s my thought, for what it’s worth…
i loved your artical. i am 23 and have been an MJ fan all my life. i actually wasn’t offended by the way you described him in the beginning. for someone who didn’t follow him, that oppinion is to be expected
your wording is brilliant in describing the experience of watching the movie. i actually already have a copy, but will probably go see it in the theater again, hoping more people will turn out than were there the first time i went
thank you from all the michael jackson fans around the world for being honest.
You’re very welcome. I can now say (to those who knew him for who he was while he was alive) I am so terribly sorry for your loss. May a little of Michael Jackson (his courage, and beauty, even the struggle with his flaws) be enhanced in all of us.
If you haven’t seen it yet, don’t wait for it to be released on DVD. It is SOOOOO worth seeing on the big screen. Don’t miss it- it won’t be showing in theaters much longer!