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Review: Mother of Michael Jackson Accuser Recalls in Documentary: “I danced when I heard that he died! I was so happy he died!”

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This is the toughest review I’ve ever had to write. What do we make of Dan Reed’s four hour, two part documentary “Leaving Neverland”? After covering Michael Jackson for almost 30 years, it’s not easy to approach this material.

The first reason is, obviously, that I thought we were done with all this. Wade Robson, his mother and sister all testified for Michael in his 2005 trial. They were on his side. Jimmy Safechuck had just disappeared into the void of Neverland kids who grew up and went away. Safechuck, from the 80s, hadn’t figured in the 2005 trial, didn’t say a word after Michael died, so that was that.

When each of them filed lawsuits, I was surprised. Michael was long dead. It seemed like a last minute cash grab. Then the court wouldn’t hear the cases. That was it.

Then came the news that they’d made this documentary. The Michael Jackson fans, so devoted still, are enraged. They’ve examined all of Robson and Safechuck’s claims down to the commas. If one interview varies from another, we hear about it. Robson seems particularly egregious since he wanted to a show business career. Michael’s estate says it turned him down for a job at a time when Robson needed money. Wasn’t that his reason for creating this maelstrom?

Now that I’ve watched the entire movie twice, I have some things to say. First, the opening two hours are devastatingly graphic. There’s one particular section midway through where you’ll need a drink, a Xanax, something. You should DVR the whole thing because at one point your mind will disconnect from the two men are describing.

Second, whether their claims are true or not, I am very sorry for the effect this will have on Prince, Paris, and Bigi, Michael’s children. They don’t deserve this. This isn’t Michael’s legacy. I hope they will just ignore the whole thing, as much as they can.

“Leaving Neverland” is about Wade and Jimmy, but it’s also about their parents. That’s what’s interesting here. Their mothers, who are a big part of the story, were only re-actors in their own life stories. They never once stopped to think about what it meant to hand their children over to Michael Jackson.

Joy Robson, who testified for Michael at the 2005 trial, blew up her own life. She took her two smallest children, left her husband, family, Australia, and moved to L.A. to be with Michael Jackson. Spoiler alert: she destroyed her husband, who eventually committed suicide. It’s quite unbelievable. Director Reed is unsparing about her, by the way. Her tragedy unfolds in the second half, and you must watch it.

Stephanie Safechuck is another matter. She resembles Joan Allen. She’s attractive, well spoken, smart. But she accepted a house– a house, a whole house– from Michael Jackson. And other gifts. She’s reasoned and sensible now. But she was also taken in. (I’m not sure if she’s still living in that house, or flipped it.) When her son finally confesses his “love affair” with Michael (same was Wade, they describe their sexual relationships that way with the King of Pop), Stephanie Safechuck, it makes sense to her.

When Michael dies, Mrs. Safechuck says: “I danced when I heard that he died. I was laying in bed, the news came on and I was, Oh thank god he can’t hurt any more children. I was so happy he died!”

Really, I believe her, but that house, that’s an issue.

Some other things: first, there is kind of a defense of Michael included in the second half. This is in the form of Michael’s defense lawyer, Tom Mesereau, who reminds us that Wade was put on the stand and examined by prosecutor Ron Zonen quite thoroughly. I was there, I watched Wade, his mother, and sister Chanelle (who’s in the movie). Personally, I keep thinking, they had their chance. But sister and mom were going on Wade’s word for years until 2013. Wade, if he’s telling the truth, lied to them his whole life.

Second: there’s little context here about other families and little boys. Michael’s history was befriending children, buying off the parents, sometimes separating mothers from fathers. There’s a long list of boys, and gifts to mollify the parents. You can make case for this, easily. Each story may have a mitigating experience, but there is an undeniable commonality. Reed only gets into this as he lets Jimmy and Wade and their mothers observe the new “class” coming in and see themselves being replaced.

One can argue that a lot of this material was available to Wade and to Jimmy if they wanted to fabricate it. They could have drawn on Victor Guitierrez’s book, which Michael stopped in court and received a judgment for $2.7 million (still uncollected). They had Shmuley Boteach’s tape transcripts, plus a book by scorned late publicist Bob Jones. Both Wade and Jimmy are rather unemotional in their confessions. Could they have constructed them these sources? Possible.

The Sunday night episode is the most graphic. Each boy relates specific sexual moments. One Michael defender warned me that these revelations, without corroboration or any counterbalance, are dramatic “gimmick.” It works! When James (aka Jimmy) shows off his “wedding ring” Michael gave him, studded with diamonds, you feel his pain. “I don’t like to look at the jewelry,” he says. No kidding. But the rings, the faxes, and other physical evidence will leave you re-examining this story.

Can we still like Michael Jackson’s music? Yes. I always say, if we’d known Picasso in real time, we wouldn’t have liked him at all. Or any artist. This is a compartmentalized brain of an artist. Artists don’t take a civics test. We’re not going to boycott Michael’s music. But he died in severe pain. No one we’ve ever heard of had a doctor administer Propofol, a dangerous anesthetic, night after night. Even though Dr. Murray was stupid and greedy, Michael was paying him for his services. We have to remember that. What kind of pain was he in? That’s for another documentary.

Plus: this is not the end. I reached out a couple of weeks ago to Evvy Tavasci, Michael’s assistant keeper of secrets for decades. I thought she could help clarify things. She could have easily defended Michael and debunked the whole story. She hung up on me instead. There are others. They may speak up in time.

So I say this to the Michael Jackson fans, the ones who came to Santa Maria, who write to me, who are so active and devoted online. There are a lot of moving parts here. You can choose not accept this movie. But for fours, watch and listen.

Can Jonas Brothers Have Their “Cake” And Success, Too? New Single Called “Sucker” Drops Tonight

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The Jonas Brothers are back.

Tonight, after a few years apart, the former family pop teen band is putting a new single called “Sucker.”

If this were any other teeny bopper group, we wouldn’t care. But after the Jonas Brothers broke up, they went on to have surprise successes on their own.

Nick Jonas went from teen heart-throb to real singer and actor. He joined the Broadway cast of “Les Miserables,” and toured with that company for a while. He was even included in the 25th anniversary show in London. Nick has scored a bunch of singles, appeared in TV shows and movies, and married Priyanka Chopra last year. He’s the real thing.

Joe Jonas took some time off, then started the group DNCE. They had a massive hit called “Cake By the Ocean,” made other recordings, even remade Rod Stewart’s “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy?” He’s engaged to “Game of Thrones” actress Sophie Turner.

Kevin Jonas has been more low key. He’s been married for ten years and has two kids. He’s dabbled in non music projects. And I guess, waited.

This “Sucker” means a lot. The boys only released four albums when they were together, none were really hits. They didn’t have any top 10s. They were born out of Disney TV, and really were for kids. So this is their first adult effort. And who isn’t rooting for them?

TV Ratings: Independent Spirit Awards So Low, They Fail to Make Top 150 Cable Shows

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There’s good news and bad news for the Independent Spirit Awards.

The broadcast last Saturday was a ratings disaster, with just 106,000 viewers. The key demo was just .03. Basically, almost no one watched them on IFC Channel. The show failed to make the top 150 cable shows on Saturday.

The good news is that this number was slightly up from last year’s 95,000. So that’s something.

Aubrey Plaza hosted the show. The winners included “If Beale Street Could Talk,” actors Glenn Close and Ethan Hawke. “Beale Street,” while an excellent film, hasn’t made much money and isn’t very high profile. Close and Hawke’s movies were also small. There wasn’t a huge audience for these films in the first place.

The Spirit Awards are down to just three sponsors. This year, Piaget dropped out.

Exclusive: Woody Allen Going to MARS? French Distributor Trying to Make Deal for “Rainy Day in New York” Despite Amazon Lawsuit

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Woody Allen has always been popular in France. So this EXCLUSIVE report makes sense,

I am told that MARS Films, Woody’s long time Drench distributor, is trying to make deal to release “A Rainy Day in New York” in France.

The movie, starring Timothee Chalamet, Jude Law, Rebecca Hall, and Elle Fanning among others, has been sidelined by Allen’s problems with Amazon. Ready for release, “Rainy Day” got caught in the #MeToo movement– inaccurately. The result was Amazon deciding unilaterally not to release the newest film by one of our greatest auteurs.

Consequently, Allen has sued Amazon for $68 million for failing to release “Rainy” and finish their deal which included four more films.

MARS, run by Stephane Célérier, has been Woody’s French distributor for years. Even if a small Allen film doesn’t do well in America, the French are his ardent admirers. Last year, Celerier wrote a long essay in a French magazine supporting Allen.

He wrote: “I have been shocked by the wave of hate provoked by the Woody Allen affair, particularly in the United States and on the social networks, and by the lack of rigor by certain media outlets and the pack which condemns without looking into the full facts.”

Célérier said it was time “to examine the facts with attention…That is the approach I have decided to take. Simply to get to the bottom of the truth, to understand whether I’ve been working closely with a paedophile all these years.”

“He has always in my eyes been a man of incredible intelligence as well as discreet and courteous. But his talent and his effervescent creativity don’t make a saint. The admiration I have for the man and the cineaste is real but have not influenced the steps I have taken to ask questions.”

“It seems clear to me that Woody Allen should not be classified in the same category as the sexual predators recently denounced by Hollywood and end his days as a pariah whose work should be burned,” he wrote.

“But it seems complicated today, impossible even, to stand-up for Woody Allen’s innocence without prompting violent reactions and accusations that I am sacrificing the rights of women for economic gain.”

We can debate the whole Woody-Mia saga forever. But the facts are, Woody was cleared of everything. Nothing happened. Mia Farrow has waged a PR war with him since 1992. Then her son with Woody, Ronan Farrow, who was 5 years old at the time, picked up the baton. He has been hypnotized by his mother into believing everything she says. He probably thinks Frank Sinatra is his father.

I really hope “Rainy Day” gets released in France and other smart territories abroad. If Célérier can make his deal, he will have to withstand crazy backlash PR. But I think the French are more open minded.

One last thing: every single #MeToo perpetrator has been accused by multiple victims. The only case to ever follow Woody is just this one, which was alleged during a custody battle. That’s it. And meanwhile, Mia Farrow’s brother, John, continues to serve time in a Maryland prison, convicted of actual child molestation. Mia has never addressed that subject.

Oscar Nominated Screenwriting Legend Paul Schrader Speaks Up on Facebook Now that Awards Season Is Over: He’d Still Like to Work with Kevin Spacey

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Paul Schrader is one of the great filmmakers, writers, directors of all time. But he was nominated for his first Oscar this year for writing “First Reformed,” which he directed, starring Ethan Hawke.

Indie A24 distributed “First Reformed” and apparently they told Paul– who’s only written “Raging Bull,” “Taxi Driver,” written and directed his own “Affliction”– to keep off Facebook and hold his tongue until Oscar season was over.

It’s over. PS You must see “First Reformed” however you can– in theater, on Netflix, Amazon, etc. It’s so brilliant.

Paul posted this last night to Facebook. It’s a gem:

“Hello. Last fall, after I admitted that I’d like to work with Kevin Spacey, A24 requested that I stay off from FB until award season was over. It’s over and I’m out of FB jail. What happened while I was gone? (1) saw Phosphorescent and did a conversation with Matthew Houck (2) spent Christmas eve with Glenn Close and my family in Xmas costumes (3) Jeff Berg, my agent and friend of 45 years, gave me a reception in his Pacific Palisades home for the Hollywood 70s crowd (4) Dan Smith of Italian fashion firm Isaia gave me a fabulous tuxedo–thanks! (5) ran into Spike Lee, Alfonso Cuaron, Pavel Paveloski, Bo Burnham and Barry Jenkins so often at so many ceremonies and events I never need to see them again (7) realized I didn’t really miss FB that much (8) got enmeshed in a process that made me care about awards I didn’t even respect (8) learned anew never to underestimate the power of mediocrity.”

Michael Cohen’s Congressional Testimony Today Will Get All Our Attention: “He is a racist, he is a con man, he is a cheat”

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Donald Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, starts testifying this morning in front of Congress. Thanks to the New York Times, we know what Cohen will say about Trump in his opening remarks:

Cohen will say:

“I am ashamed of my own failings, and I publicly accepted responsibility for
them by pleading guilty in the Southern District of New York. I am ashamed of my weakness and misplaced loyalty – of the things I did for Mr. Trump in an effort to protect and promote him.
I am ashamed that I chose to take part in concealing Mr. Trump’s illicit acts rather than listening to
my own conscience. I am ashamed because I know what Mr. Trump is.
He is a racist.
He is a conman.
He is a cheat.”
Trump will be in Hanoi on his Vietnam trip, watching this live on TV. The ironies are huge. Trump got out of serving in the Vietnam War because he was rich and his daddy, Fred Trump, arranged for him to have bone spurs. Now Trump is finally in Vietnam, and his whole criminal enterprise is going to be exposed to the world.
Entertainment news will suffer. But isn’t this entertainment news? As my dear late friend Liz Smith said to me three summers ago, “Show business is politics now, honey.” She was so right.

Cannes Jury Leader Will Be Oscar Winner (Birdman, The Revenant) Alejandro Gonzales Innaritu

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The 2019 Cannes jury should be interesting. The festival has announced the leader, and it’s Alejandro Gonzales Innaritu, multiple Oscar winner for “Birdman” and “The Revenant.” He won back to back Oscars for writing and directing each of those, and leading “Birdman” to a Best Picture win.

Innaritu has also won awards for movies like “Babel,” “Buitiful,” and “Amores Perros.”

So hold on: maybe he’ll choose Guillermo del Toro and Alfonso Cuaron to join him, plus Salma Hayek and Penelope Cruz. They’ll make it all Mexico and Spain. It would be a great theme for Cannes! All Oscar winners and nominees from those countries. We’ll drive Trump crazy!

Add to that the very strong possibility of a new Pedro Almodovar movie called “Pain and Glory” starring Antonio Banderas and Penelope.

I’m in!

PS I’d love it if Cannes would show Woody Allen’s “Rainy Night in New York.” So would the French!

Yikes! Oscar Winning “Platoon” Producer Arnold Kopelson and “Star Wars” Producer Gary Kurtz Also Omitted from In Memoriam

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I’m getting all kinds of emails this evening about the Oscars In Memoriam– and I’m on plane!!

The Academy really really goofed. They left out Oscar winning “Platoon” producer Arnold Kopelson and Gary Kurtz, nominated for producing “Star Wars.”

Jeez Louise.

Arnold Kopelson was beloved. Beloved! He also produced movies like “The Fugitive” and “US Marshalls.” The Kopelsons are an integral part of the Hollywood community for more than 40 years. What went wrong here? You can’t believe the mail I got on this one.

Gary Kurtz not only produced the original “Star Wars” movie, now called “A New Hope,” but he also co-produced George Lucas’s “America Graffiti” with Francis Ford Coppola, his first Oscar nomination. He also produced “The Empire Strikes Back” (the second “Star Wars” movie at that time), and Monte Hellman’s classic “Two Lane Blacktop.”

Yesterday I wrote about the other glaring omissions including Carol Channing and Stanley Donen.

It seems like if we’re going to support the new, very expensive Academy Museum, then we’ve got to pay respects to the people who made the museum possible content-wise.

So I will make this offer to the Academy for next year. Free of charge, no salary, nothing– I will personally vet the In Memoriam names starting mid December right  through the morning of the Oscars– February 9, 2020. Please, let me do it. No one wants mistakes like these. And I’m happy to help.

UPDATE from 2016: In an “LA Minute” Movie Producer and 2 Music Producers Charged with Fraud by the SEC

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This is one for the books. In 2016 I wrote about a movie called “In an LA Minute” that had been shut down while shooting in Savannah, Georgia. It involved a movie producer and two music producers, one of whom was named Michael Flanders. The movie eventually was released last August and made a stunning five thousand and four dollars. Yes, a total of $5,004.

Three years later, the SEC has indicted all three on charges of fraud. The SEC says the three alleged con men conned investors in that movie. Ha! “L.A. Minute” was had that non starter release, no one ever knew about, most forgot about it.  I sure did.

This is where it gets good. A couple of weeks ago, Flanders had a mutual friend call me and ask if I could take down my 2016 story. It was affecting his business, and nothing had ever come of the story. Flanders himself called and asked me to take it down. My story was always coming up when someone Googled his name. As gesture of good will in the new year, I said OK, why not? I took down the story.

Imagine my surprise this evening to get a press release from the SEC. They indicted these three schmoes. They’re saying Flanders induced two people to invest money into a movie that had no other investors, then kept $28,500. It’s not even a lot of money, really. But look at the way he played me. The guy is smooth. He was lying in December 2016 when I published the original story. He certainly knew a couple of weeks ago that the SEC was going to indict him.

I hope the SEC makes their case stick.

Anyway, when you think of it, Mel Brooks was really prescient with “The Producers.”

I’ve republished the original article, and you can read the SEC indictment at the link above.

 

Lady Gaga, Queen Conquer the iTunes Charts After Oscar Performances Score with the Audience

The Oscars have been a boon to those who performed on the show.

Lady Gaga has three of the top 5 singles on the iTunes chart from “A Star is Born.” “Shallow” is number 1. Even her song “One Million Reasons” is in the top 20.

The soundtrack album to “A Star is Born” is back at number 1 as well. another version is number 5.

Two of Bradley Cooper’s songs from the movie are hits, too.

In between Queen is the filling for a Gaga sandwich. The soundtrack to “Bohemian Rhapsody” is number 2. Spots three and four are Queen greatest hits albums. “A Night at the Opera” is number 49.

Queen also has 13 singles on the iTunes top 100. “Bohemian Rhapsody” is number 7. You’d think Brian May could have been nicer when I ran into him later. Even his wife couldn’t figure out what was bugging him.

Meanwhile Ludwig Göransson’s Oscar winning score to “Black Panther” is at number 50 on iTunes. But the nominated Kendrick Lamar song “All the Stars” is nowhere to be seen. Lamar declined to perform on the show. He has a Pulitzer Prize! Isn’t that enough?