Michael Jackson's Thriller  ( video)

"Michael Jackson's Thriller" title card.
Directed by John Landis
Produced by George Folsey Jr.
Written by John Landis
Michael Jackson
Starring Michael Jackson
Ola Ray
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Epic Records Productions
Release date(s) December 2, 1983
Running time 13:43
Language English
Budget $500,000[1]
Sales:
9 million units
"Michael Jackson's Thriller" is a 14-minute music video for the song
of the same name released on December 2, 1983 and directed by John
Landis, who also co-wrote the screenplay with Jackson. The mini-film
music video was broadcast on MTV three weeks before Christmas 1983. It
was the most expensive video of its time, costing US$500,000[1], and
Guinness World Records listed it in 2006 as the "most successful music
video", selling over 9 million units.[2]

"Thriller" was less a conventional music video and more a full-fledged
short subject or mini-film: a horror film homage featuring
choreographed zombies performing with Jackson. The music was re-edited
to match the video, with the verses being sung one after the other
followed by the ending rap from Vincent Price, then the main dance
sequence (filmed at 3701 Union Pacific Avenue in East Los Angeles[3])
to an instrumental loop, and finally the final: the choruses in a "big
dance number" climactic scene. During the video, Jackson transforms
into both a zombie and a werecat (although makeup artist Rick Baker
referred to it as a "cat monster" in the "Making of Thriller"
documentary); familiar territory for Landis, who had directed An
American Werewolf in London two years earlier.

Co-starring with Jackson was former Playboy centerfold Ola Ray. The
video was choreographed by Michael Peters (who had worked with the
singer on his prior hit "Beat It"), with Michael Jackson. The video
also contains incidental music by film music composer Elmer Bernstein,
who had previously also worked with Landis on An American Werewolf in
London. The video (like the song) contains a spoken word performance
by horror film veteran Vincent Price. Rick Baker assisted in
prosthetics and makeup for the production. The red jacket that Jackson
wore was designed by John Landis' wife Deborah Landis to make him
appear more "virile".[4]

Jackson, who at the time was one of Jehovah's Witnesses, added a
disclaimer to the start of the video, saying:

“ Due to my strong personal convictions, I wish to stress that this
film in no way endorses a belief in the occult. ”

To qualify for an Academy Award, "Thriller" debuted at a special
theatrical screening, along with the 1940 animated motion picture
Fantasia.




Contents [hide]
1 Plot
2 Awards
2.1 Grammy Award
2.2 MTV Award
3 Making Michael Jackson's Thriller
3.1 Behind the Scenes
4 Broadway and litigation
5 In popular culture
6 See also
7 References
8 External links



[edit] Plot

Jackson dancing with the undead.It is the early 1960s. A teenaged
Michael and his unnamed date (Ola Ray) run out of gas in a dark,
wooded area. They walk off into the forest, and Michael asks her if
she would like to go steady. She accepts and he gives her a ring. He
warns her, however, that he is "different". A full moon appears, and
Michael begins convulsing in agony – transforming into a horrifying
werecat. His date shrieks and runs away, but the werecat catches up,
knocking her down and begins lunging at her with its claws.

The scene cuts away to a modern-day movie theater (exteriors filmed at
the Palace Theatre in downtown Los Angeles[5]), where Michael and his
date – along with a repulsed audience – are actually watching this
scene unfold in a movie called "Thriller" starring Vincent Price.
Michael's date is scared, but he is clearly enjoying the horror flick.
Frightened, his date leaves the theatre. Michael puts his popcorn
down, and catches up to her, smiling and saying "It's only a movie!"
Some debate follows over whether or not she was scared by the scene;
she denies it, but Michael disagrees.

Michael and his date then walk down a foggy street, and he teases her
with the opening verses of "Thriller". They pass a graveyard, where
corpses suddenly begin to rise from their graves as Vincent Price
performs his rap. Michael and his date then find themselves surrounded
by the zombies, and suddenly, Michael becomes a zombie himself.
Michael and the undead perform an elaborate song and dance number
together, followed by the chorus of "Thriller" (in which Michael is
changed back into human form), frightening his girlfriend to the point
where she runs for cover.

The girl is chased into an abandoned house (filmed in the Angeleno
Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles at 1345 Carroll Avenue[6]), where
Michael (who reverts back to zombie form) and his fellow zombies back
her into a corner. As Michael slowly reaches for her throat, she lets
out with a blood-curdling scream, only to awake and realize it was all
a dream. As a human Michael calmly asks "What's the problem?", he
offers to take her home. As the two depart, Michael glances back at
the camera, grins and reveals his yellow cat-like eyes (accompanied by
Vincent Price offering one last haunting laugh).

After the credits, when they concurrently show the zombies dancing
again, the disclaimer humorously states, "Any similarity to actual
events or persons living, dead (or undead) is purely coincidental."
Landis' An American Werewolf in London likewise offered this
disclaimer.


[edit] Awards

[edit] Grammy Award
Year Category Result Notes
1985 Best Video, Long Form Winner "Thriller"
1984 Best Video Album Winner Making Michael Jackson's Thriller


[edit] MTV Award
Year Category Result
1999 100 Greatest Music Videos Ever Made[7] #1
1984 Best Overall Performance in a Video Winner
1984 Best Choreography (Michael Peters) Winner
1984 Viewer's Choice Winner


[edit] Making Michael Jackson's Thriller
Released in tandem with the video was an hour-long documentary
providing candid glimpses behind the scenes of the production. Called
Making Michael Jackson's Thriller, it, too, was shown heavily on MTV
for a time and was the top-selling home-video release of all time at
one point, with over 900,000 copies sold.


[edit] Behind the Scenes
Well, it was a delicate thing to work on because I remember my
original approach was, 'How do you make zombies and monsters dance
without it being comical?' So I said, 'We have to do just the right
kind of movement so it doesn't become something that you laugh at.'
But it just has to take it to another level. So I got in a room with
[choreographer] Michael Peters, and he and I together kind of imagined
how these zombies move by making faces in the mirror. I used to come
to rehearsal sometimes with monster makeup on, and I loved doing that.
So he and I collaborated and we both choreographed the piece and I
thought it should start like that kind of thing and go into this jazzy
kind of step, you know. Kind of gruesome things like that, not too
much ballet or whatever.

—Michael Jackson[8]

[edit] Broadway and litigation
In 2009, Jackson sold the rights of "Thriller" to the Nederlander
Organization, to stage a Broadway musical based on the video.

Jackson was sued by director John Landis in a dispute over royalties
for the video; Landis claims he is owed four years worth of
royalties.[9][10]

Ola Ray has also complained in the past about difficulties collecting
royalties. At first, Ray blamed Jackson, but then apologized to him in
1997.[11] However, Ray eventually sued Jackson on May 6, 2009 in a
dispute to obtain uncollected royalties.[12] Jackson died suddenly
less than two months later on June 25.[13]


[edit] In popular culture
The video, particularly its choreography, has been the subject of
numerous parodies and homages in television and film.

In 2007, a "Thriller"-inspired video featuring the dancing inmates of
a high security penitentiary in the Philippines imitating the zombie
dance became a popular viral video.
Since 2007, Canadian dancer Ines Markeljevic has organized "Thrill the
World," an annual worldwide simultaneous dance to Michael Jackson's
"Thriller" with specially arranged choreography from the music video.
The event takes place in October each year (just before Halloween),
and features dancers in cities all over the world performing the dance
at the exact same moment. Thrill Toronto 2006, the predecessor to
Thrill The World, set the first Guinness World Record for "Largest
Thriller Dance" (in one location). Thrill The World set the world
record for "Largest Simultaneous Thriller Dance" in 2007 with 1,722
people in 55 cities on 5 continents. In 2008, Thrill the World broke
that record when 4,177 people from 10 nations around the world
simultaneously danced the Thriller at 11:00 PST on October 25/26[14].
The dance number was also seen in 13 going on 30 , where Jenna (played
by Jennifer Garner) tries to save a party from becoming a disaster.
Sequences of choreography from the Thriller video also feature in the
dance group's stairs routine during the Twist and Shout scene in
Ferris Bueller's Day Off

[edit] See also
List of most expensive music videos

[edit] References
^ a b Director: Funds for "Thriller" almost didn't appear
^ Guinness World Records (2006)
^ Lindsay (2008-10-08). "Cause This Is Thriller". iamnotastalker.com.
http://www.iamnotastalker.com/2008/10/30/cause-this-is-thriller/.
Retrieved on 2009-07-03.
^ Lauren Goode (June 30, 2009). "Deborah Landis, Designer of the Red
Jacket Michael Jackson Wore in “Thriller”". Wall Street Journal.
Speakeasy. 
http://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2009/06/30/deborah-landis-designer-of-the-red-jacket-michael-jackson-wore-in-thriller/.
Retrieved on July 4, 2009. "At the time, she says, the 25-year-old
Jackson weighed only 99 lbs, with a 26-inch waist (“exactly the same
height and weight as Fred Astaire”), and one of the challenges she
faced was making the performer appear more “virile.”"
^ Lindsay (2008-10-22). "Darkness Fall Across the Land, the Midnight
Hour is Close At Hand...". iamnotastalker.com.
http://www.iamnotastalker.com/2008/10/22/darkness-fall-across-the-land-the-midnight-hour-is-close-at-hand/.
Retrieved on 2009-07-03.
^ Lindsay (2007-12-07). "Charmed I'm Sure". iamnotastalker.com.
http://www.iamnotastalker.com/2007/12/04/charmed-im-sure/. Retrieved
on 2009-07-03.
^ MTV: 100 Greatest Music Videos Ever Made
^ "Michael Jackson's Life & Legacy: Global Superstar (1982-86)". VH1.
Archived from the original on 2009-07-06.
http://www.vh1.com/artists/news/1615220/20090702/jackson_michael.jhtml?rsspartner=rssMozilla.
Retrieved on 2009-07-07.
^ Legal Thriller: Michael Jackson Sued by John Landis Yahoo News,
January 27, 2009
^ Michael Jackson sued by 'Thriller' director
^ 
http://www.mjfanclub.net/home/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=633:ola-ray-apologizes-to-michael&catid=85:latest-news&Itemid=82
^ [1]
^ latimes.com
^ http://www.recordholdersrepublic.co.uk/recordholdersdetails.asp?id=683

[edit] External links
Michael Jackson Book Of Condolence - Michael Jackson Online Book Of Condolence
Thriller (1983) (V) at the Internet Movie Database
Michael Jackson's Thriller at Allmovie
Thriller Filming Locations - Filming at the Palace Theatre
Thriller Filming Locations - The Zombie Dance Sequence
Thriller Filming Locations - The Thriller House
[hide]v • d • eMichael Jackson

Main articles Health and appearance · Neverland · 1993 accusations of
child sexual abuse · Living with Michael Jackson · People v. Jackson ·
Death · Memorial service

Studio albums Got to Be There · Ben · Music & Me · Forever, Michael ·
Off the Wall · Thriller · Bad · Dangerous · HIStory · Invincible

Compilations The Best of Michael Jackson · Anthology · Number Ones ·
The Ultimate Collection · The Essential Michael Jackson · Visionary:
The Video Singles · King of Pop

Other releases One Day in Your Life · E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial ·
Farewell My Summer Love · Looking Back to Yesterday · Blood on the
Dance Floor: HIStory in the Mix · Thriller 25  · Michael Jackson: The
Stripped Mixes · Hello World: The Motown Solo Collection

Concert tours Victory Tour · Bad World Tour · Dangerous World Tour ·
HIStory World Tour · This Is It

Videography The Wiz · Thriller · Captain EO · Moonwalker · "Stark
Raving Dad" · Ghosts · Miss Cast Away  · Dome Project

Video releases Dangerous - The Short Films · Video Greatest Hits -
HIStory · HIStory on Film, Volume II · Number Ones · The One · Live in
Bucharest: The Dangerous Tour

Assets Northern Songs · Sony/ATV Music Publishing

Influence on society Moonwalk · Heal the World Foundation · Thrill the
World · Thriller (viral video) · Michael Jackson tribute concert

Related articles Jackson family · The Jackson 5 · Singles discography
· Awards · Records and achievements · Moon Walk · Bubbles · Michael
Jackson's Moonwalker · Lisa Marie Presley · Debbie Rowe


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Jackson%27s_Thriller";
Categories: Music videos | Zombie films | Films directed by John
Landis | 1983 films | Short films

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