The Hollywood Reporter (Weekly)

When Scorsese and the King of Pop Made a Thrilling Duo

- — RYAN GAJEWSKI

There was nothing small about Michael Jackson’s long-awaited follow-up to his 1982 smash Thriller, the best-selling album of all time. Released five years after Thriller helped establish the singer as the King of Pop, Bad

made history with five singles topping the Billboard Hot 100 — but only one of them, the title track, featured an 18-minute music video directed by Martin Scorsese.

With a script from Richard Price, who penned Scorsese’s 1986 feature The Color of Money,

the video for “Bad” was a narrative short film focusing on Darryl (Jackson), a fleet-footed prep school student pulled back into a life of crime when he reconnects with his neighborho­od friends.

Playing gang leader Mini Max was a then-unknown Wesley Snipes, who had recently graduated from the theater program at SUNY Purchase. Snipes recalls Jackson being a bit misinforme­d about his background and tells THR with a laugh, “MJ thought I was a real gang member they hired from off the streets and encouraged me to pursue acting as a real career.” Initial confusion aside, Snipes describes the shoot as an “incredible experience” and remembers Scorsese as soft-spoken and not inclined to give much direction, but that he encouraged Snipes to “approach rehearsals like my one shot and only performanc­e.”

The project debuted as part of CBS’ primetime special Michael Jackson … The Magic Returns on

Aug. 31, 1987, the same day of the album’s release, although THR’s review dismissed the “Bad” video as “hackneyed/creatively bankrupt.” But the experience certainly made an impact on Scorsese. Following Jackson’s death in June 2009, the filmmaker — who is Oscar-nominated for best picture and director for Killers of the Flower Moon and set to receive the PGA’s David O. Selznick lifetime achievemen­t award Feb. 25 — remarked: “When we worked together on ‘Bad,’ I was in awe of his absolute mastery of movement on the one hand and of the music on the other.”

As for Snipes, he quips about Scorsese, “He’s a much better director than dancer.”

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