How ironic. Michael Jackson is dead. But in “This Is It,” the filmed chronicle of rehearsals for shows that never happened, he finally gets his greatest wish granted: He’s a movie star (here’s THR’s review from Kirk Honeycutt).
“This Is It” is quite extraordinary. If there was any doubt that Michael was in control of the shows or his decisions, those fears are allayed here. Maybe he was sleeping 15 hours a day. But during these rehearsals, he couldn’t have been more focused or hardworking. It is truly amazing considering the last 16 years of total lunacy to see him so capable.
Director Kenny Ortega was smart in his edits. You see Michael almost from the beginning, dancing up a storm, singing without assistance vibrantly. True, he is very thin. But you also see that it’s a result of working out like crazy. Yes, he could have been five pounds heavier. But I dare anyone who sees this movie to try one of Michael’s moves.
“This Is It” is also notable for its emotional moments. At the end of a rehearsal of the Jackson 5 hit “I’ll Be There,” he calls out all of his brothers for a thank-you, as well as both parents. It’s a three-hanky moment. Some of his family will be embarrassed now about the way they’ve behaved.
One thing’s for sure: AEG spent a lot of money on this show. The production numbers are spectacular and sumptuous. “Smooth Criminal” is one of the standouts. The making of the “Thriller” number in 3D is remarkable.
And just wait ’til you see and hear him sing “I Just Can’t Stop Loving You” and “The Way You Make Me Feel” as Michael sings the blues and teaches the musicians how to play his charts. “It needs more booty,” he tells a keyboard player trying to get the right sexiness.
Will “This Is It,” dedicated to Michael’s kids, be a hit? Let’s put it this way: I already want to see it again. The fans will see it five times. Expect Sony to extend this release. “This Is It” is the “Thriller” of the year.
As Michael himself says, it’s a great adventure.
For another take on the “This Is It” premiere on the West Coast, check out THR’s Risky Business blog. Read the film review by THR chief film critic Kirk Honeycutt here.
THE STARS COME OUT IN NYC
Spike Lee was the first boldfaced name we saw wander into Theater 9 at the Regal E Walk tonight for “This Is It.” He had his kids with him. The rest of the A-list gang followed: Gayle King, Russell Simmons, Sherri Shepherd. Famed director Lasse Hallstrom brought his 14-year-old daughter. “Law & Order: SVU” star Tamara Tunie arrived with buddy Marva Hicks. Bob and Lynne Balaban took corner seats. Clive Davis snuck in with two lady friends at the last minute. Elsewhere in the room, DJ Cassidy – a wild Michael Jackson fan– was already thinking about queueing up for the midnight show. There were rare appearances by Ed and Annie Pressman, Johnny Pigozzi and Ken Sunshine. And these were just the people Peggy Siegal stocked Theatre 9 with — Bryan Bantry had his own gang in No. 8.
It was a far cry from the shallow nuttiness we watched on the screen from Hollywood. Leanza Cornett, once a Miss America, is no Katie Couric, that’s for sure. She looked at a loss as a gaggle of ferociously unimportant people filed by her: Jennifer Love Hewitt and her boyfriend, Jamie Kennedy; American Idols Adam Lambert and David Cook; a bewildered Paula Abdul. Nia Long. Will Smith was smart and didn’t go near her. Also seen on the red carpet: fake Jackson kid Omer Bhatti and his mom, Pia Bhatti, still looking for some spotlight. And then the Jackson brothers Marlon, Tito, and Jackie -- nice guys. They almost got to speak, but then Jermaine –resplendent in a blue magic carpet of a coat that looked like it was made by Persian Bob’s Cut Rate Carpets — horned in and started answering questions. The other brothers barely looked at him. In the background was a guy known only as Raffles, a Joe Jackson lackey with a sketchy history who skipped his usual yellow jacket full of black question marks. The whole thing was summed up in its total lack of importance by Cornett interviewing Mary Hart. All they were missing was Bubbles the Chimp…






October 27th, 2009 at 6:45 pm
I am glad to see you kept the negativity out of this piece. Thank you
October 27th, 2009 at 7:10 pm
I am so happy about your review
cant wait to see it with my 3yr old daughter tomorrow
she loves mj so much
October 27th, 2009 at 8:18 pm
Roger, agree with you completely that MJ was totally in control of his music and his dance moves. A high point was watching the buff and gorgeous dancers look in MJ in awe as he danced. This movie reminds us of how much talent he had. You leave the theater feeling very sad about the huge talent we’ve lost and the amazing show we’ll never seen. Tragic. And yet I can’t wait to see it again either. Wish audiences had stayed until the end; the final shot of MJ’s feet en pointe stays with you.
October 27th, 2009 at 8:34 pm
The DVD’d better be a five-hour box set!
October 28th, 2009 at 12:48 am
I’ll see the movie tonight. I am sure is captures MJ in his best moments, that it is masterfully edited, but leaves out all the hours he could not eat or sleep or even make himself go to rehearsals – and MJ was known for working hit butt of on preparing a tour, he was never six hours late before. I believe Karen Faye and the followers who were seriously worried about him, and in spite of his exciting moments on stage here, they were sadly ultimately right.
This footage came at a great cost, the highest cost, and a red carpet at this event doesn’t sit well with me. It’s like a Roman gladiator game, a cheering audience witnessing someone die.
October 28th, 2009 at 1:31 am
Just saw the movie..OMG!!! You bet he still had it. What an amazing piece of movie. I already got ticket and am going back tomorrow.
Everyone stood up at the end and gave the film a standing ovation.
It wasn’t as sad as I thought it would be..MJ is a genius. He really put the bar higher.
If you get the chance, go see the movie..You won’t regret it. Promise.
October 28th, 2009 at 1:47 am
Just saw the movie tonight in L.A. and it was just amazing! Michael still had it and if people are gonna continue to talk after this, they need to sit down and be quiet. Yes, he was thin but after you see this movie, you’ll see why – he was working his butt off!
Michael is a funny cat… “I need to sizzle right there.” And you see how much of a perfectionist and control freak he is – he was in CONTROL of this production, let me tell you.
October 28th, 2009 at 2:03 am
I wonder why you had to put snide remarks before and after some the names … was that necessary … you could have written a plain report on the happenings without all the banter … Geeezzz.
The review was great but the rest SUCKED … boooyaaahhhh
October 28th, 2009 at 3:36 am
Brilliant review! I won’t get to see “This Is It”, unfortunately, until Friday, but I’m sure it’s already a big hit for the Sony et al cash mongerers. Axon’s post said it best, so please go read it, then point your browsers to http://www.this-is-not-it.com/ and get the truth about it all- if you aren’t afraid to know. Though the world has lost a terrific person, I know that MJ would still want us to “Smile, though our hearts are breaking…” as the lyric states to do in his favorite old standard. RIP, Michael.
October 28th, 2009 at 7:47 am
I am so happy to see all the great reviews being written about this movie!!Sad to say there will still be some MJ haters out there saying mean and horrible things but I have gotten to the point where their opinions don’t matter to me anymore.I bet Michael’s kids are so proud of their Dad!
October 28th, 2009 at 8:35 am
“There were rare appearances by Ed and Annie Pressman, Johnny Pigozzi and Ken Sunshine. And these were just the people Peggy Siegal stocked Theatre 9 with — Bryan Bantry had his own gang in No. 8.”
Oh, wow! Such big stars! So important! So famous! Now tell me who the hell ANY of these people are. You name these nobodies going to see this movie in NY, acting like they’re anyone that the public would gives two craps about, and then turn around and act like the people you named in LA (who EVERYBODY has heard of, and who ARE famous) are the “nobodies”? Get real, dude. Can you say “sucking up”?
October 28th, 2009 at 9:18 am
Thanks Roger, i will see it 5 times for sure! Michael was beyond genius
October 28th, 2009 at 11:18 am
Beau,
Keep your three year old out of the theatres! I don’t what IT making noise and ruining my enjoyment of the movie!
October 28th, 2009 at 12:20 pm
I wonder if Gavin Arvizo and Jordy Chandler will see it. Probably not. Jordy is busy counting his money and Gavin is probably too poor to buy a ticket. Yes, Jacko has left a great legacy.
October 28th, 2009 at 1:31 pm
Paul you are truly going to hell! You are just so envious and jealous of MJ it’s truly sad! Paul..sorry to break it to ya but Mr. Michael Joseph Jackson IS THE KING..chew on it stop reading your Enquirer and just move on!
October 28th, 2009 at 2:04 pm
music expert
my 3 yr old was well behaved
the only noise she was making was singing and bobbing to mj’s song
October 28th, 2009 at 2:11 pm
Great movie, wonder if Jordy will see it?
October 28th, 2009 at 2:40 pm
[...] Continue reading Review: ‘This Is It’ [...]
October 28th, 2009 at 10:51 pm
Very talented man, this is very true..Just not intelligent enough to stay away from children even after going through the hell he went through the first time around. What was he thinking when he agreed to sit down with Martin Bashir?…Not very smart. But incredibly talented.
October 29th, 2009 at 3:06 am
Paul,
I’m sorry you were unhappy with my coverage of this spectacular event. I had a blast, and didn’t feel “at a loss” but it’s unfortunate that I came off that way. In your opinion.
Since you seem to be so unhappy, I want you to know I am praying for you. You deserve to be a happy person…life is too short!
Warmly,
Leanza
October 29th, 2009 at 3:08 am
Excuse me…I addressed my note to Paul…I meant Roger. I suppose it’s just my poor reporting skills at work…
October 29th, 2009 at 5:55 am
I seen it last night and I have to say: I was blown away. I had no clue what to expect but I came out of that theater speechless. The whole theater applauded after, many were crying. It was a great experience and I will be returning for a second viewing for sure. Michael was a genius and I have so much respect for him!
October 29th, 2009 at 6:05 am
I’ve seen the movie too.
1. He still had it – voice and dance. He held back, but then sometimes let go.
2. He would never have let us see this, because it’s rehearsal and far far from perfect. He always in his performances played both to our emotions and sense of beauty and perfection, and here he often marks the dancing and singing and from time to time hurries through routines he knows are settled. But we get to see that this would have been a success.
October 29th, 2009 at 7:01 am
Hey Roger I guess you miss this one …. Joe is planning on building a museum and a performing arts studio in Gary, Indiana in honor of Michael …. I wonder what everyone will think about this … who will be making the profit from this … because non-profit does not mean NO MONEY …. just saying. Check Radar Online …. haha
October 29th, 2009 at 7:30 am
I saw it and I loved it, was angry and sad at the end, did this have to be? Did it have to end at all? I remember thinking after the trial in 2005 what in the world he was doing, wandering the globe. He belonged back on the stage.
The film was proof of that.
I’m with you, Roger, I will see it again.
What a hole this leaves in our sinking world. MMH
October 29th, 2009 at 9:03 am
Samurai Woman, no one will be making a profit from anything Joe Jackson is planning to do because he will ruin anything he touches.
If he actually wanted to do something like that for the people of Gary, why didn’t he do it 30 or 40 years ago when he actually still had money coming in (from his child slaves) and could fund it?
Py, you’re the one going hell…assuming that hell is filled with idiots such as yourself, with little to no reading comprehension. My last comment had nothing to do with michael Jackson, doofus.
October 29th, 2009 at 10:55 am
I watched the movie yesterday and I am delighted with our “King of Pop”!
Because we never had the opportunity to learn more about Michael Jackson directing, teaching, making it happen?
Brazil is loving the movie, many are wearing T-shirts and going to objects of Michael Jackson!
Many leave the cinema in tears, I confess that I had to restrain myself not to scream my anger by all that surrounds this tragedy happened to our “King of Pop”!
As written in the column is all too ironic!
His fans love him more than Michael Jackson!
October 29th, 2009 at 12:26 pm
“But I dare anyone who sees this movie to try one of Michael’s moves.”
Thanks for that, Roger. Read a review yesterday in which the reviewer scoffed that MJ was way past his peak of 20 years ago. I’d like that guy to read your review. AND to try dancing the Thriller routine.
October 29th, 2009 at 3:43 pm
Paul sounds like you already live there sorry for you! Again go buy your weekly copy of your bible and truly fuck off. Who’s the one with the issues here..you post your ignorant comments on a thread you see has fans and spill your spew and we call you out on it..you have been asked numerous times by MANY to get a life or at least educated..IMO please take their advice..what are you 12? Again get a life limpy!
October 29th, 2009 at 9:52 pm
I am so glad I went to see it today. Michael is outstanding in many ways. His good-bye, to the music industry and last curtain call
was perfect for all fans who dearly loved him . Luckily for us, it was captured, a masterpiece! We love you to MJ.
October 31st, 2009 at 4:26 pm
Py, you seriously must be retarded.