Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary- DVD / Blu Ray [available on iTunes Nov 19]

Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

MJ Online Team is telling us that tomorrow the US broadcaster and the date of broadcast for Spike Lee's Bad 25 documentary will be announced.
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

Cool :)
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

MJ Online Team is telling us that tomorrow the US broadcaster and the date of broadcast for Spike Lee's Bad 25 documentary will be announced.


OMG! :eek:
kermit.gif
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

Double OMG:wild::clapping:
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

MJ Online Team is telling us that tomorrow the US broadcaster and the date of broadcast for Spike Lee's Bad 25 documentary will be announced.


That's cool.

(Is it the MJ show that BET are airing on 18th September? :))

Any idea if they have managed to line up a UK broadcaster yet? Can you ask them?
We didn't get the Pepsi promo cans so it would be nice if they at least got some prime time slot on a decent channel (BBC1 or ITV1) for the documentary here...
 
Last edited:
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

UPDATE _ LOOKS like no Red Carpet for the event due to counsel restrictions
Thank you for the guest names, everyone just needs to bring ID, no tickets will be given. With regard to
any red carpet outside the event I'm afraid there won't be anything due to council restrictions
.
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

We didn't get the Pepsi promo cans so it would be nice if they at least got some prime time slot on a decent channel (BBC1 or ITV1) for the documentary here...

I don't see either channel giving up 130 minutes of primetime for a Michael Jackson documentary. ITV would have to give up nearly 150 minutes or more to allow for advertising too.

It's more likely to appear on a paid for channel I think. Else if a major network gets it, it'll either be shown or one of their supplemental channels, or very late on the main channel.
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

I can't wait to see it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

I don't see either channel giving up 130 minutes of primetime for a Michael Jackson documentary. ITV would have to give up nearly 150 minutes or more to allow for advertising too.

It's more likely to appear on a paid for channel I think. Else if a major network gets it, it'll either be shown or one of their supplemental channels, or very late on the main channel.

I think they will probably edit it for a tv broadcast. I don't expect any major network to show a docu that's over 2 hours....
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

Normally BBC 2 & 4 show the latest music Documentaries they were the first to show Foo Fighters Back & Forth
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

BBC FOUR often show that 4 hour long Tom Petty documentary so I could see it being on there. Perhaps they'd make an MJ night of it.
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

Is it possible to see it on streaming?
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

Probably. People always stream live TV.
If not streaming, within hours it will be online after airing.
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

I really hope to see it. :D
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

I might have to move away from the forums after it's shown to avoid spoilers.
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

I heard that we might get the Pepsi MJ cans etc at the end of the year.

I was going to take my 13 year old neice with me on Sunday, does anyone know if there are any age restrictions. My email just said to email them with my name and my guests name but no more information.

Thanks.
 
First reactions from Venice:

Spike Lee's tribute to Michael Jackson rocks Venice

VENICE, Italy — US director Spike Lee brought together Michael Jackson's studio hands and previously unseen behind-the-scenes footage for a documentary that premiered Friday at the Venice film festival.

"Bad 25" deliberately leaves out the scandals surrounding the late pop legend in favour of an in-depth look at the making of "Bad" -- 25 years after the release of what became one of the best-selling albums of all time.

Home videos shot by Jackson himself or by his closest collaborators during rehearsals will delight fans, revealing the king of pop's impish sense of humour, unflagging creative energy and meticulous attention to detail.

Many of the interviews were shot in the studio where "Bad" was recorded and bring out the still-raw emotions over Jackson's 2009 shock death from choreographers, sound technicians and musicians who knew him at his best.

The documentary is a treasure trove for nostalgics for big hair and pop beat days, with tributes from singers Justin Bieber, Mariah Carey and Stevie Wonder as well as Lee's voice heard off camera chuckling in the interviews.

Interviews with Martin Scorsese, who filmed the music video for "Bad", and concerts and footage of screaming fans also brings back memories of the anticipation surrounding the release of the album in pre-Internet days.

It is perhaps weighed down, however, by the bewildering quantity of the interviews and very little footage of Jackson himself talking about his work.

A half-hearted attempt to affirm Jackson's place in the tradition of African-American soul singers is also perhaps insufficiently explained.

The documentary is scheduled for general release next month.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/af...ocId=CNG.c9505832970b0e6821f31c94de8097d4.4a1



Michael Jackson Glorified in Spike Lee Movie in Venice

Twenty-five years to the day after Michael Jackson released his chart-topping album “Bad,” director Spike Lee rolled out his documentary on the making of the album at the Venice Film Festival.

“Bad 25” features informal footage shot by Jackson himself and recordings of his vocal exercises. There are also interviews with personalities he influenced -- including Mariah Carey, Cee Lo Green, Kanye West and even Justin Bieber.
Enlarge image Spike Lee

Spike Lee against the levee wall on the set of his movie, "If God is Willing and da Creek Don't Rise," in New Orleans. Lee has debuted a documentary about the late Michael Jackson during the Venice Film Festival 2012. Photographer: Charlie Varley/HBO via Bloomberg

Lee’s two-hour artistic tribute completely dismisses the tabloid reports of Jackson’s bizarre personal life, his pet monkey, plastic surgery and oxygen tank.

“It’s like saying there’s a cobweb on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel,” says producer-composer Quincy Jones early on in “Bad 25.”

The documentary gives a blow-by-blow account of how the “Bad” album came about, focusing on the music videos for a more visual moviegoer experience.

Director Martin Scorsese is interviewed at the start about his 18-minute video for the “Bad” single, shot in the New York subway. Scorsese confesses that Michael’s signature crotch touch was a surprise to him -- and kept it in because it didn’t look inappropriate.

We hear of Jackson’s rivalry with Prince, and their frosty meeting, at which Prince appeared with a voodoo box that Jackson was convinced would put a spell on him.
Beating ‘Thriller’

Jackson had a motivational message of “100 million albums” which he inscribed in a mirror even before “Bad” came out, so determined was he to match and exceed the popularity of the previous album “Thriller.” His record producer also notes that Jackson had a business mind and would count his royalties.

Many segments are devoted to Jackson’s dance moves and choreographies. The film shows his well-publicized admiration of Fred Astaire and classic musicals, as well as of the more recent “All That Jazz.”

The movie ends with participants describing where they were when they heard of his death. The final shots, taken at the end of a mega-concert, are of Jackson saluting the audience with his arms stretched out in a crucifixion-like position.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-08-31/michael-jackson-glorified-in-spike-lee-movie-in-venice.html
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

Prince appeared with a voodoo box that Jackson was convinced would put a spell on him.


And ppl thought michael was crazy......why in the heck would prince bring a voodoo box with him..??????? :crazy:
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

First reactions from Venice:

It is perhaps weighed down, however, by the bewildering quantity of the interviews and very little footage of Jackson himself talking about his work.

This is the one thing I was worried about. Let's hope that it's not as bad as is said by the reviewer. Hopefully it's more technical stuff from the people who worked with Michael on the album that will appeal mostly to hardcore fans rather than current celebrities waxing poetic on how great they think MJ is.
 
Bad 25: Venice Review
venice_film_festival_bad_25.jpeg

The Bottom Line

Even those of us who developed a Michael Jackson allergy during the saturation attention that followed his death will find rich rewards in Spike Lee's terrific documentary tribute.

Spike Lee captures a specific pinnacle in Michael Jackson's career and a precise period in American popular music culture with his comprehensive recap of the making, marketing and legacy of the 1987 album, 'Bad.'

VENICE – Michael Jackson continues to be bigger dead than alive. It might have seemed that Kenny Ortega had his legacy covered with the 2009 documentary This Is It, but Spike Lee goes one better with Bad 25, an obsessively detailed quarter-century anniversary tribute to the 1987 album that capped the three-prong commercial tsunami Jackson began with “Off the Wall” and “Thriller.”

The film is a sensational snapshot of the peak of the music video as art form, as well as the intricately layered process by which superior pop is crafted. More poignantly, it serves to remove the veil of late-period craziness and allegations and restore the reputation of Jackson as a multi-hyphenate musician of peerless discipline, professionalism and perfectionism – not to mention a pioneering influence in dance and fashion. Following its Venice and Toronto bows, Bad 25 is scheduled to air on ABC at Thanksgiving.

Lee directed Jackson’s 1996 music video for “They Don’t Care About Us.” Despite conducting the interviews personally, he keeps himself out of the picture here aside from one or two audio snippets. But it’s clear that his connection to this material runs deep, revealing itself, for example, in his exhaustive attention to the making of Martin Scorsese’s short film for the album’s title track. No less fascinating is his recap of the multiple choreographic influences that went into the video for “Smooth Criminal,” ranging from Fred Astaire in The Band Wagon to Soul Train to Bugs Bunny to Buster Keaton. The wealth of primo talking-heads fodder makes this of interest far beyond Jackson fans to anyone curious about the production and marketing of popular music.

The director’s appetite for trivia is contagious. Who remembered that Wesley Snipes made his acting debut in the “Bad” video? Or that the arcane refrain “Shamone!” was Jackson’s homage to Mavis Staples? Or that the line “Annie, are you OK?” was inspired by the standard name given to CPR demonstration dummies?

It’s obvious that Lee is having as much fun as the audience sitting in with Scorsese and editor Thelma Schoonmaker as they look back over their work on the Bad short 25 years on. Writer Richard Price, who scripted the film for Scorsese, is – forgive me – priceless, discussing how an asthmatic Italian and an asthmatic Jew were enlisted by Jackson to make a video “to show the brothers that he’s down with them.” But Lee also gives serious consideration to the ways in which Jackson reaffirmed his connection to the black community.

Despite acknowledging the album’s flaws – everyone, including Stevie Wonder, agrees that his duet with Jackson, “Just Good Friends,” was a dud – the film is not guiltless of hagiography. But the fandom of interviewees like Mariah Carey, Justin Bieber, Cee Lo Green, Chris Brown and Sheryl Crow, who performed as a big-haired backup singer on the Bad Tour, is generally disarming. (Perhaps the exception is Kanye West, who seems too self-regarding to really serve someone else’s tribute.)

Arguably, Lee’s one significant misstep is to lurch abruptly – at the end of a meticulous track-by-track reconstruction of the album’s recording and the shooting of its many music videos – to footage of Jermaine Jackson announcing his brother’s death. Lee then strings together a series of “Where were you when you heard he’d died?” responses, holding the camera on the subjects as they tear up. This feels manipulative and heavy-handed compared to the stimulating social context and illuminating insights that distinguish the doc and pinpoint it at a key moment in Jackson’s career.

But that’s just nitpicking. As forcibly inserted as they are, the memorials do serve to usher in a stirring assessment of “The Man in the Mirror” as a master class in how to build the perfect anthemic pop song. Input here comes from co-writers Glen Ballard and Siedah Garrett, as well as producer Quincy Jones and choirmaster Andrae Crouch, among others. The knockout closing footage of Jackson performing the song in a 1988 Wembley Stadium concert, accompanied by 72,000 screaming fans, is the film’s emotional high point.

It’s to Lee’s credit that he doesn’t just go for the famous faces. Instead he digs into every aspect of the music by talking with engineers, arrangers, session musicians, vocal coaches, video actors, dancer-choreographers, recording industry execs, managers, lawyers, biographers and music journalists. Particularly humorous is plain-speaking Joe Pytka, who directed the “Dirty Diana” and “The Way You Make Me Feel” videos. But invaluable contributions come from a wide variety of sources.

The film doesn’t shy away from the negatives. It covers the inescapable hype that accompanied the album release; the “Wacko Jacko” stigma; the specter of racism; the animosity toward Jackson in some circles for his stratospheric success; and the perceived encroachment on sacred terrain when he purchased the Beatles catalogue. Significant time is spent on the goldfish-bowl vulnerability of being in the spotlight since childhood, reflected in the song “Leave Me Alone,” with its “Gulliver’s Travel”-style, tabloid-nightmare photo-animation video.

Mostly, however, Lee keeps the focus on the extraordinary professional achievement that the album still represents, capturing Jackson at the apex of his quest for full creative independence. Beyond its value as a deep-probe portrait of the artist, this is a superb account of the music business and an indispensable pop-cultural time capsule :)
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/bad-25-venice-review-367157
 
Paris78;3699856 said:
VENICE – Michael Jackson continues to be bigger dead than alive.

Stupid critic who wrote above is worthless dead or alive.


Anyways, by reading articles from many other countries, Lee's document draw applauses out of the audience.
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

Lee brings Michael Jackson "Bad" magic to big screen

By Mike Collett-White
VENICE | Fri Aug 31, 2012 10:21am EDT
(Reuters) - Spike Lee's film about the making of Michael Jackson's 1987 album "Bad" may border on hagiography at times, but live footage and the singer's attention to detail when at the peak of his powers are a reminder of why he remains the "King of Pop".

The two-hour documentary called "Bad 25", which has its world premiere at the Venice film festival on Friday, is a familiar mix of talking heads - choreographers, producers and stars - and film of concerts, rehearsals and music videos.

Released to coincide with the 25th anniversary of Jackson's acclaimed follow-up to "Thriller", Lee provides few surprises for Jackson aficionados, but paints a picture of a genius at work who cared about every step of the production process.

"I think that it was too many years we've ... concentrated on stuff about Michael Jackson that had nothing to do with the music," Lee told reporters, 25 years to the day after Bad hit the shelves.

The documentary, which Lee called his "love letter" to Jackson, has the backing both of the singer's estate and his record label, giving Lee access to many of the key players in the making of what is regarded as a milestone album.

"It was a chance to really dig into his creative process," he added.

"We all are blessed with the final work, but it's rare that you get to see how something is put together. We just see the final product. We don't see the blood, sweat and tears, all the work that goes into how the masters work."

Among the novelties is footage taken by Jackson himself, using a handheld camera, of Siedah Garrett singing "Man in the Mirror", the song she co-wrote for the star, a cappella save for an off-camera clicking of fingers laying down the beat.

There are also small yet enlightening insights and hints as to Jackson's true character, be it his interest in women, competitive spirit, professional drive or obsession over the smallest riff and dance step.

Garrett, for example, recalls how Jackson playfully threw popcorn at her as she tried to record "I Just Can't Stop Loving You", earning her, but not Jackson, a sharp rebuke from the onlooking producer Quincy Jones.

"NOT OF THIS WORLD"

Sheryl Crow said she was often asked whether Jackson became aroused when they performed a raunchy rendition of the song on his record-breaking "Bad" tour. She did not provide an answer.

Actress Tatiana Thumbtzen speculated that mint on the singer's breath suggested he may have been prepared for a kiss at the end of the "The Way You Make Me Feel" video, despite strict instructions only to embrace the singer.

Lawyer John Branca, who administers Jackson's estate following his death aged 50 in 2009, recalled a meeting Jackson arranged with his arch-rival Prince.

"It was not a happy meeting," he said, adding Prince had brought along a "voodoo box" which Jackson feared meant he was trying to cast a spell on him.

That rivalry was part of a competitive streak in Jackson that drove him to try to top the sensational success of his 1982 album "Thriller", still the best-selling album of all time, with Bad five years later.

He even scrawled "100,000,000" on his mirror to remind him of his target. While industry estimates vary widely, Thriller is estimated to have sold between 60-110 million copies worldwide, while Bad went on to sell 30-45 million.

Nothing, it seemed, was too trival. In one sequence, Jackson comically re-enacts exactly how he wants two animated characters who feature in a commercial to behave.

On a more serious level, Lee explores how Jackson's Afro-American roots were important to him, despite his gradually transforming facial features that made him appear more Caucasian.

Several interviewees could not contain their tears as they remembered when they heard of Jackson's passing, and several voiced their conviction at the time that it was not true.

Crow was among those who struggled to explain Jackson's talent. "The molecules changed in the room," she said of his presence. "He changed the molecules."

Near the end of Bad 25 there is a memorable live performance of "Man in the Mirror", after which Jackson holds his hands aloft to form the shape of a cross.

"Michael's not here to answer that. I cannot say he's trying to be Jesus Christ," Lee said in answer to a reporter's question.

"I'm not going to say that Michael was saying he was Jesus Christ, but you look at that performance - he's somewhere else. That's one of the greatest performances ever. You see the way Michael's singing that song, he is not of this world."

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012...s-venice-michaeljackson-idUSBRE87U0PG20120831
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

I don't see why a documentary on the Bad era has to even mention Michael's death. I'd prefer it be left out, but that's just my personal preference.

Not much mention of footage of Michael in these reviews. Hopefully there is a lot of it.
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

Actress Tatiana Thumbtzen speculated that mint on the singer's breath suggested he may have been prepared for a kiss at the end of the "The Way You Make Me Feel" video, despite strict instructions only to embrace the singer.

Oh Tatiana! So, that's what made her plant her lips on Michael.:cheeky: I feel for her, because he was irresistable!!
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

The reuters review is one of the better ones. I can't wait to see this.
 
Re: The Spike Lee BAD 25 Documentary [Discussion] Spec Invitation to UK Premiere

I am waiting for fans' review who were there, their opinion is more important to me than media critics' who never even got Michael.
 
Xtarlight and Mpenziwe;3699826 said:
First reactions from Venice:

"Bad 25" deliberately leaves out the scandals surrounding the late pop legend in favour of an in-depth look at the making of "Bad" -- 25 years after the release of what became one of the best-selling albums of all time.


ee’s two-hour artistic tribute completely dismisses the tabloid reports of Jackson’s bizarre personal life, his pet monkey, plastic surgery and oxygen tank.

thats how it should be done. I know the wankers, uhmm makers of all these specials and docu's about Michael get turned on, when vomit all these scandals and crap every time, cause they think thats what people want to see. but you're so damned fucking wrong M.F's.
You have no idea how none fans enjoyed "This it It".


quote:
It is perhaps weighed down, however, by the bewildering quantity of the interviews and very little footage of Jackson himself talking about his work.

Of course is weighed down and little Michael talking himself. he is not here. I know many think Michael was always thinking in the future sense, but i don't think he was thinking to make 25th anniversary of his albums, to interview himself about the working process.

this is going to be great just as TII was and liked not only by fans. Of course only if its televised often enough.
 
Spike Lee captures a specific pinnacle in Michael Jackson's career and a precise period in American popular music culture with his comprehensive recap of the making, marketing and legacy of the 1987 album, 'Bad.'


VENICE – Michael Jackson continues to be bigger dead than alive. It might have seemed that Kenny Ortega had his legacy covered with the 2009 documentary This Is It, but Spike Lee goes one better with Bad 25, an obsessively detailed quarter-century anniversary tribute to the 1987 album that capped the three-prong commercial tsunami Jackson began with “Off the Wall” and “Thriller.”

The film is a sensational snapshot of the peak of the music video as art form, as well as the intricately layered process by which superior pop is crafted. More poignantly, it serves to remove the veil of late-period craziness and allegations and restore the reputation of Jackson as a multi-hyphenate musician of peerless discipline, professionalism and perfectionism – not to mention a pioneering influence in dance and fashion. Following its Venice and Toronto bows, Bad 25 is scheduled to air on ABC at Thanksgiving.

Lee directed Jackson’s 1996 music video for “They Don’t Care About Us.” Despite conducting the interviews personally, he keeps himself out of the picture here aside from one or two audio snippets. But it’s clear that his connection to this material runs deep, revealing itself, for example, in his exhaustive attention to the making of Martin Scorsese’s short film for the album’s title track. No less fascinating is his recap of the multiple choreographic influences that went into the video for “Smooth Criminal,” ranging from Fred Astaire in The Band Wagon to Soul Train to Bugs Bunny to Buster Keaton. The wealth of primo talking-heads fodder makes this of interest far beyond Jackson fans to anyone curious about the production and marketing of popular music.

The director’s appetite for trivia is contagious. Who remembered that one of Wesley Snipes' earliest roles was in the “Bad” video? Or that the arcane refrain “Shamone!” was Jackson’s homage to Mavis Staples? Or that the line “Annie, are you OK?” was inspired by the standard name given to CPR demonstration dummies?

It’s obvious that Lee is having as much fun as the audience sitting in with Scorsese and editor Thelma Schoonmaker as they look back over their work on the Bad short 25 years on. Writer Richard Price, who scripted the film for Scorsese, is – forgive me – priceless, discussing how an asthmatic Italian and an asthmatic Jew were enlisted by Jackson to make a video “to show the brothers that he’s down with them.” But Lee also gives serious consideration to the ways in which Jackson reaffirmed his connection to the black community.

Despite acknowledging the album’s flaws – everyone, including Stevie Wonder, agrees that his duet with Jackson, “Just Good Friends,” was a dud – the film is not guiltless of hagiography. But the fandom of interviewees like Mariah Carey, Justin Bieber, Cee Lo Green, Chris Brown and Sheryl Crow, who performed as a big-haired backup singer on the Bad Tour, is generally disarming. (Perhaps the exception is Kanye West, who seems too self-regarding to really serve someone else’s tribute.)

Arguably, Lee’s one significant misstep is to lurch abruptly – at the end of a meticulous track-by-track reconstruction of the album’s recording and the shooting of its many music videos – to footage of Jermaine Jackson announcing his brother’s death. Lee then strings together a series of “Where were you when you heard he’d died?” responses, holding the camera on the subjects as they tear up. This feels manipulative and heavy-handed compared to the stimulating social context and illuminating insights that distinguish the doc and pinpoint it at a key moment in Jackson’s career.

But that’s just nitpicking. As forcibly inserted as they are, the memorials do serve to usher in a stirring assessment of “The Man in the Mirror” as a master class in how to build the perfect anthemic pop song. Input here comes from co-writers Glen Ballard and Siedah Garrett, as well as producer Quincy Jones and choirmaster Andrae Crouch, among others. The knockout closing footage of Jackson performing the song in a 1988 Wembley Stadium concert, accompanied by 72,000 screaming fans, is the film’s emotional high point.

It’s to Lee’s credit that he doesn’t just go for the famous faces. Instead he digs into every aspect of the music by talking with engineers, arrangers, session musicians, vocal coaches, video actors, dancer-choreographers, recording industry execs, managers, lawyers, biographers and music journalists. Particularly humorous is plain-speaking Joe Pytka, who directed the “Dirty Diana” and “The Way You Make Me Feel” videos. But invaluable contributions come from a wide variety of sources.

The film doesn’t shy away from the negatives. It covers the inescapable hype that accompanied the album release; the “Wacko Jacko” stigma; the specter of racism; the animosity toward Jackson in some circles for his stratospheric success; and the perceived encroachment on sacred terrain when he purchased the Beatles catalogue. Significant time is spent on the goldfish-bowl vulnerability of being in the spotlight since childhood, reflected in the song “Leave Me Alone,” with its “Gulliver’s Travel”-style, tabloid-nightmare photo-animation video.

Mostly, however, Lee keeps the focus on the extraordinary professional achievement that the album still represents, capturing Jackson at the apex of his quest for full creative independence. Beyond its value as a deep-probe portrait of the artist, this is a superb account of the music business and an indispensable pop-cultural time capsule.

Venue: Venice Film Festival (Out of Competition)

Production companies: Optimum Productions, Forty Acres & a Mule Filmworks, Optimum Productions

With: Mariah Carey, Kanye West, Sheryl Crow, Stevie Wonder, Antonio L.A. Reid, Justin Bieber, Chris Brown, Walter Yetnikoff, Larry Stessel, John Robinson, Ollie Brown, Martin Scorsese, Thelma Schoonmaker, Cee Lo Green, Joe Pytka, ?uestlove, John Branca, Joe Vogel, Richard Price, Siedah Garrett, Glen Ballard, Ruben Blades, Steve Stevens, Tatiana Thumbtzen, Will Vinton, Jeffrey Daniel

Director-producer: Spike Lee

Executive producers: John Branca, John McClain, Antonio L.A. Reid

Director of photography: Kerwin DeVonish

Editor: Barry Brown

No rating, 129 minutes
 
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