John Landis About Making Thriller Video

Justice!

Proud Member
Joined
Jul 25, 2011
Messages
415
Points
0
(24-4-2008) In preparation of the special Thriller Night at the Tribeca Film Festival - director John Landis gave an interview to Metromix New York about what it was like making one of the best videos ever:

How did the whole project get off the ground?
Well, Michael Jackson called me out of the blue. He had seen Rick Baker’s work, transforming a man to a wolf in “An American Werewolf in London.” Michael was fascinated by the transformation and said he wanted to make a film in which he turned into a monster onscreen. Rock videos at that time were commonly made to sell records, and I wasn't interested in that. But I was definitely interested in doing a theatrical short, and because [Michael] was so big, we knew there'd be interest in showing it. And it was a chance to do a dance number with really good dancers and shoot it correctly.

Was it difficult to get the financial backing for it?
We figured it would cost half a million, which was a lot since people were spending fifty to seventy thousand back then. CBS and Sony video told us to go **** ourselves. There were already two successful videos that had been made [from the album]:“Beat it” and “Billie Jean.” Plus, the album was already No. 1 and had sold more records than any other in history when the video premiered. So Michael said, “Well, I'll pay for it”, and I said, “Absolutely not.” He was still living with his parents then. He said, “Why don't you film us making it? We can do ‘The Making of Thriller’ and that would be 45 minutes and the actual video would be 15, and it could be an hour [program] on Showtime.” When MTV heard we were going to show it on Showtime first, then they wanted it and they gave us money.

And the rest is history.
Well, it played [as a short] with "Fantasia" for two weeks in L.A. and was such a sensation. But then CBS fucked me because they gave the video free to every TV station in the world. Once “Thriller” got to MTV and was on international TV, like, 24 hours a day, the album went back to No. 1 and doubled its sales. It totally established MTV, and established the power of the medium.

Then I got a call from Austin Furst at Vestron who said, “I'd like to put ‘Thriller’ and ‘The Making of Thriller’ on VHS for home video.” I said, “It's on TV for free. Who'd buy it?” He said, “I intend to put it out on sell-through for $24.95." I thought, nobody’s going to buy this, but over a million sold. It created the home-video business. [...]

What’s coming up for you now?
I have a book coming out, called “John Landis,” by Italian author Giulia D’Agnolo Vallan. It has interviews and articles by many collaborators of mine. We’ll be doing two book signings in New York. Also, I'm in the cutting room right now. I was one [of several directors] to shoot a show for NBC called “Fear Itself.” It’s like the son of “Family,” which I did for the “Masters of Horror” series. I'm most famous for my comedies—I think it's a riot that I am a "master of horror."

Source: http://newyork.metromix.com
 
Last edited:
See this is why I trust Michael to make his own choices when it comes to his music. Even this with John Landis, many of these projects would have fell through if it was up to John as well but Michael pushed to get it through. Look at Sony who did not want to give the money YET they benefited from Thriller and put SOny on the map to be the label to be on back in the 80's. Even when it came to Quincy, Michael pushed to have Q to be his producer which many did not want Michael to have him. Thriller put Q even bigger than he always was an made him hotter. It put MTV on the map even more (sorry but the videos they were playing at the time were lame compare to when Billie Jean, Beat it, Thriller came on it and made MTV a must have).
 
See this is why I trust Michael to make his own choices when it comes to his music. Even this with John Landis, many of these projects would have fell through if it was up to John as well but Michael pushed to get it through. Look at Sony who did not want to give the money YET they benefited from Thriller and put SOny on the map to be the label to be on back in the 80's. Even when it came to Quincy, Michael pushed to have Q to be his producer which many did not want Michael to have him. Thriller put Q even bigger than he always was an made him hotter. It put MTV on the map even more (sorry but the videos they were playing at the time were lame compare to when Billie Jean, Beat it, Thriller came on it and made MTV a must have).
Yes, indeed Terrell. Mike is a gambler. He took risk and won. Even Quincy didn't want to accept Billie Jean as it was and MJ took the risk with it and it payed off. There are many stories like that. MJ sent the Thriller album back to the drawing board cause it wasn't whjat hew wanted, he was right. Many people take credit for MJ's work, cause they refuse to believe that he is so claver. Who would have thought that MJ would have suiggested to make a video of the making of and start a home video trend.
 
Last edited:
Yeah, but Michael was going to destroy the Thriller footage, because of the Jehovah's Witnesses. John had a hard time trying to talk him out of it. Mike compromised and put that disclaimer at the beginning.
 
Yeah, but Michael was going to destroy the Thriller footage, because of the Jehovah's Witnesses. John had a hard time trying to talk him out of it. Mike compromised and put that disclaimer at the beginning.
Well, he was going to destroy hos own creation. I'm glad he didn't though.:D
 
Awwwww.....I LOVE reading things like this!

Thanks for posting!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Great article
Ive always admired John Landis
and he and Michael worked very well
together and created a lot of fun moments
for us ..
 
Thanks for posting.

As usual, Mike is a risk takers and risk takers always know what they are doing. MJ thinks and does what he thinks. That is why he is still in this business. The haters can hate, but they will have to admit, MJ is one smart dude.
 
So Michael said said:
on Showtime.” When MTV heard we were going to show it on Showtime first, then they wanted it and they gave us money. QUOTE]


This part does not seem quite right to me. He implys the MJ at home has no money; which is a lie. When did MTV finance Thriller?
They may have paid for right to show it first but not finance the production. I thought that MJ and JL went in together and made music history.
 
So Michael said said:
on Showtime.” When MTV heard we were going to show it on Showtime first, then they wanted it and they gave us money. QUOTE]


This part does not seem quite right to me. He implys the MJ at home has no money; which is a lie. When did MTV finance Thriller?
They may have paid for right to show it first but not finance the production. I thought that MJ and JL went in together and made music history.

It didnt imply that at all.
you just took it that way -
and MJ was not a billionaire then either.
he didnt even have Thriller under his belt yet

That was a GREAT expense even for Michael - but he was
willing to take the risk - knowing it could return his investement
John wanted them to make money not have to spend it if they could
get someone else to back it _ Thats ALL -
 
Last edited:
Back
Top