Michael Jackson's Ghosts
1996 Short Film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael Jackson's Ghosts is a 1996 short film starring Michael Jackson, directed by Stan Winston, and written by Stephen King and Mick Garris. It is based on a story by Garris, Jackson and King.
Michael Jackson's Ghosts | |
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![]() Promotional poster | |
Directed by | Stan Winston |
Screenplay by | Stan Winston Mick Garris |
Story by | Michael Jackson Stephen King Mick Garris |
Produced by | Michael Jackson Stan Winston David Nicksay |
Starring | Michael Jackson |
Cinematography | Russell Carpenter |
Edited by | Marcus Manton |
Music by | Michael Jackson (songs) Nicholas Pike (score) |
Production companies | MJJ Productions Kingdom Entertainment Optimum Productions |
Distributed by | SMV Enterprises |
Release dates |
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Running time | 39 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $15 million ($30 million in 2024 dollars)[1] |
Ghosts tells the story of an eccentric man with supernatural powers being forced out of a small town by its judgmental mayor. Jackson plays five roles, and performs dance routines set to the songs "2 Bad", "Is It Scary" and "Ghosts", taken from his albums HIStory (1995) and Blood on the Dance Floor: HIStory in the Mix (1997). The AV Club described Ghosts as an allegory for Jackson's life and pop culture status.
Ghosts was filmed and released in 1996 and released along with select prints of the horror film Thinner, and was first screened in the 1997 Cannes Film Festival.[2] It was released as promo a year later internationally on LaserDisc, VHS and Video CD.
Plot
The mayor of Normal Valley leads a mob to the mansion of the Maestro (Jackson), who has been entertaining local children with magic tricks and ghost stories. The children assure the parents the Maestro has done nothing wrong, but the mayor intends to banish him as a "freak".
The Maestro challenges the mayor to a "scaring contest": the first to become scared must leave. He performs magic tricks and dance routines with a ghostly horde, then possesses the mayor, forcing him to dance. After the performance, the Maestro agrees to leave and crumbles to dust, but returns as an enormous ghoul. Terrified, the mayor leaps through the window. The families agree that they had fun and allow the Maestro to stay.
Production
Ghosts began production in 1993 under the title Is This Scary? with the director Mick Garris. It was planned for release in conjunction with the 1993 family comedy film Addams Family Values.[3] Jackson backed out of the deal, returning an estimated $5 million,[4] and the Addams Family connection was dropped.[3] Stan Winston, previously in charge of makeup and visual effects, took over as director when Garris left to make the Shining miniseries.[3] According to Garris, Ghosts was the most expensive music video ever made, at around $15 million, all paid for by Jackson.[5]
Cast
- Michael Jackson as Maestro / Mayor / Mayor Ghoul / Superghoul / Skeleton
- Pat Dade as Pat
- Amy Smallman as Amy
- Edwina Moore as Edwina
- Dante Beze as Dante
- Seth Smith as Seth
- Kendall Cunningham as Kendall
- Loren Randolph as Loren
- Heather Ehlers as Heather
Choreographers
Dancers
- Michael Balderrama
- Troy Burgess
- John "Havic" Gregory
- M.G. Gong
- Heather Hayes
- Paula Harrison
- Shawnette Heard
- Cris Judd
- Richard Kim
- Dorie Konno
- Kelly Konno
- Suzi McDonald
- Courtney Miller, Jr
- Nikki Pantenburg
- Travis Payne
- Mia Pitts
- Charlie E. Schmidt
- Joie Shettler
- Yuko Sumida
- Anthony Talauega
- Richmond Talauega
- Lisa Joann Thompson
- Mic Thompson
- Stacy Walker
- Michelle Weber
- Jason Yribar
Release
Ghosts was screened out of competition at the 1997 Cannes Film Festival.[7] At over 38 minutes long, it held the Guinness world record for the longest music video until 2013, when it was eclipsed by Pharrell Williams' "Happy".[8] In 2020, the film was available on Jackson’s YouTube channel from October 29 to November 1.
In December 1997, towards the end of promotion for Michael Jackson's remix album Blood on the Dance Floor, a Deluxe Collector Box Set of Ghosts was released only in Europe. The box set included a VHS release of Jackson's Ghosts mini-movie on home video and his Blood on the Dance Floor album on CD, as well as a CD maxi single, Limited Edition Minimax CD. "On the Line" was the first track on this single.[9]
Reception
The A.V. Club writer Nathan Rabin described Ghosts as "clunky, leaden and overblown", and said it was a "staggeringly blunt" allegory for Jackson's life and pop culture status.[10] He attributed its failure to Jackson's place in the public imagination at the time, following his recent divorce from Lisa Marie Presley and the 1993 child molestation allegations against him.[10]
On the Line
Summarize
Perspective
"On the Line" | ||||
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Single by Michael Jackson | ||||
B-side |
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Released | January 11, 1997 | |||
Recorded | 1996[11] | |||
Genre | ||||
Length |
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Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) | Babyface | |||
Michael Jackson singles chronology | ||||
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"On the Line" is a song co-written and produced by Babyface. Michael Jackson performs the track and is also credited in its writing (on the writing credits of The Ultimate Collection). It was originally recorded by Jackson for the Spike Lee film Get on the Bus (1996), but it was not featured on the soundtrack.[9][12]
The full-length version of the song was released on November 16, 2004 as an album track of his limited edition box set The Ultimate Collection.[9][13]
Personnel
Track listing
Limited Edition Minimax CD (EPC 665268 2)[16]
- "On the Line" (Short Version) – 4:37
- "Ghosts" (Mousse T's Radio Rock Singalong Remix) – 4:25
- "Is It Scary" (DJ Greek's Scary Mix) – 7:12
References
External links
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