China Daily (Hong Kong)

New dimension to trailblazi­ng pop video

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VENICE, Italy — Director John Landis says his new 3D version of Thriller gives Michael Jackson fans chance to see the groundbrea­king video how the late king of pop would have wanted them to.

“Michael and I always intended it to be seen in a cinema,” Landis said on Monday at the launch of his new revamped version of one of popular music’s most influentia­l and successful production­s at the Venice Film Festival.

Using modern technology, Landis has remixed the sound and enhanced the visuals as well as making the 1983 recordings 3D compatible.

“When you watch in on YouTube, you don’t see how it is supposed to be. Now you can see the way Michael intended it to be,” Landis added.

“My only disappoint­ment is that he is not here to see it, because he’d love it.”

The 14-minute werewolf-themed video is screening in Venice alongside a “making-of” video that was also made in 1983 but has never had a cinema release before.

Jackson died in 2009, aged 50, not long after Landis and Thriller producer George Folsey had launched legal action against him over rights and royalties to the video.

A settlement was reached with Jackson’s estate in 2012, and Landis said the legal issue had not had any impact on the shock he felt on hearing of the singer’s untimely death.

“It was a tragedy — for his children, for his friends, for the whole world,” he said.

“Truly great performers are rare. I was horrified and I am still upset about it.”

Landis was approached by Jackson to make the video after the singer watched his film An American Werewolf in London, telling the director he wanted to go through the same kind of transforma­tion from man to four-legged wolf creature featured in the film.

“We realized it wasn’t going to work — if Michael was going to dance, it would be a hell of a lot easier for his monster to have two legs instead of four,” Landis said.

As result, the look of the monster sequence in the video ended up being inspired more by a 1957 film, I Was a Teenage Werewolf.

“It turned out Michael had not seen too many horror movies — he found them too scary,” Landis recalled.

“It was basically a vanity video because Michael wanted to turn into a monster and everything that came from that was spectacula­rly successful. I was totally surprised.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Director John Landis at the Venice Film Festival on Monday.
REUTERS Director John Landis at the Venice Film Festival on Monday.

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