Contentious Michael Jackson doccie airs in SA tonight: here's what to expect
'Leaving Neverland' is no subtle examination of the abuse claims against the King of Pop
Image: Dave Hogan/Getty Images
HBO's two-part, four-hour documentary Leaving Neverland is not the worst thing to happen to pop god Michael Jackson since his death in 2009. Were he alive, it wouldn’t be the worst thing to happen to him since his two trials for sexual abuse of minors. No, Leaving Neverland is the worst thing ever to happen to Michael Jackson, dead or alive.
You can tell that by the 53-page letter the singer's estate sent to HBO and by the furore that it’s led to in the media, with Jackson devotees foaming at the mouth and declaring war on anyone who believes the testimonies of the two men who are the focus of the film.
Those two men — Wade Robson and James Safechuck — had never met and have now reached the stage in their own lives where they have their own children and have decided to let the world hear the stories they were kept from telling for decades.
Stories that are eerily similar and paint a portrait of Jackson as a predatory and methodical child abuser with an MO that saw him use the glitz and trappings of his money and fame to entice parents into allowing him access to his victims.
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The film is not about Jackson so much as about these two victims whose complicated and inappropriate relationships with him led them to lie to themselves, their families and even the courts, when they were called on as character witnesses in the singer’s 2003 trial for sexual misconduct.
Yes, Jackson is not around to defend himself and, yes, director Dan Reed does not interview members of the Jackson family or those close to him to counteract the accusations of Robson and Safechuck, but the very real pain, suffering and lack of any motive other than sharing their stories offered by the men's accounts is hard to ignore.
It casts a pall over the legacy of the King of Pop that's seen radio stations pull his music from their playlists, the Simpsons producers remove an episode featuring him and former defenders coming out publicly to say that they were wrong to defend him.
In the era of MeToo, the final reckoning of R Kelly and the revelations of the Jimmy Saville investigation in the UK, it is almost impossible not to accept that Michael Jackson had a dark and disturbed personal life that destroyed the lives of many of the young boys he shared a supposedly platonic bed with.
Arguments have been made that because all his accusers were white men, the accusations against Jackson are part of a racist attempt to besmirch the reputation of the most successful black singer in history.
These are convenient for his die-hard legions of fans and represent a cynical and frankly disingenuously desperate playing of the race card that muddies the waters and distracts from the testimonies of his victims who have sacrificed much in order to tell their stories. If Jackson had a preferred type and they happened to be young and white — that’s on him, not on them.
Reed's documentary is not the most subtle examination, but then again perhaps it doesn’t need to be — there was always something strange about Jackson and his relationships with young men that needed to be spoken about and wasn’t.
Now that we have the testimonies of two of those young men, it is time to ask ourselves hard questions about just what we’re willing to let modern day gods get away with in order to keep our memories of them free of real life and its complicated, messy murkiness.
The music may live on, divorced conveniently from the history of its maker, and that’s a fair choice that you can make — what you can’t do anymore is pretend as if there isn’t a divide between the artist and the art.
• 'Leaving Neverland: Part 1' screens on DSTV channel 101 tonight at 9pm. 'Part 2' screens tomorrow at 9pm.