Patrick Ryan USA TODAY
A woman who drove
from Calgary, Canada, holds a sign of support for Michael Jackson outside of
the Sundance Film Festival premiere of "Leaving Neverland."
DANNY
MOLOSHOK/INVISION/AP
PARK CITY, Utah –
After weeks of pushback from Michael Jackson’s estate, HBO’s highly anticipated
“Leaving Neverland” bowed at Sundance Film Festival.
“We’re getting real,
really early,” festival director John Cooper said Friday morning as he
introduced the four-hour documentary, which details allegations of child
molestation against the late pop icon. Police officers were stationed outside
the Egyptian Theatre in case of protesters, and healthcare professionals were
on hand in the lobby for audience members who could be triggered by the film’s
graphic descriptions of sexual abuse involving minors.
“Neverland” centers
on accusers Wade Robson, 36, and James Safechuck, 40, who allege that Jackson
began sexually abusing them at ages 7 and 10, respectively. At the time, both
boys were diehard fans with entertainment aspirations of their own: Robson, who
went on to choreograph for Britney Spears and 'N Sync as an adult, met Jackson
after winning a dance contest during the singer’s 1987 Bad tour in Australia.
Safechuck, a child actor, appeared with Jackson that same year in a Pepsi commercial
and says he began to hang out regularly with the star in Los Angeles.
"Finding
Neverland," a documentary film about two boys who accused Michael Jackson
of sexual abuse, premiered at Sundance Film Festival on Friday.
AARON LAMBERT/AP
Robson and Safechuck
each filed lawsuits against Jackson’s estate in 2013 and 2014, respectively,
although judges denied both for technical reasons and did not evaluate the
merits of the allegations. Both men were on hand for Friday’s screening in Park
City, where they tearfully appeared with director Dan Reed.
"Neverland"
has drawn intense backlash from the musician's fans since it was announced
earlier this month.
The star's nephew
Taj Jackson called the documentary "a one sided hit job" on Twitter
Saturday.
In a statement to
USA TODAY following Friday's premiere, Jackson's estate said that the project
"isn’t a documentary, it is the kind of tabloid character assassination
Michael Jackson endured in life, and now in death. The film takes
uncorroborated allegations that supposedly happened 20 years ago and treats
them as fact. ... The two accusers testified under oath that these events never
occurred."
The statement goes
on to say that Robson's assault allegations "suddenly emerged" when
he "was denied a role in a Michael Jackson-themed Cirque du Soleil
production."
Here are five allegations
presented in “Neverland,” which premieres on HBO this spring.
1. 'Leaving
Netherland' alleges a lot of sexual activity at Michael Jackson's ranch
Safechuck claims
that Jackson introduced him to masturbation while staying together at a hotel
in Paris. "He told me I was his first sexual experience," says
Safechuck, adding that one morning, Jackson told him he performed oral sex on
him while he was sleeping.
Robson alleges
similar sexual encounters with Jackson when he would visit Neverland Ranch, and
says the pop star kept a large cardboard cutout of Peter Pan in his bedroom,
which he would often look at as he masturbated. Robson says that Jackson later
introduced him to porn and gave him alcohol.
2. He would
allegedly run drills with James Safechuck to avoid getting caught
At the start of
their relationship, Safechuck alleges that Jackson would regularly test him on
how quickly he could put on his clothes as quietly as possible. When
Safechuck's or Robson's parents stayed at the same hotel, both men allege
Jackson often ensured they were staying down the hall or on different floors
from the suites Jackson shared with the boys. He also had multiple locks and
thick wooden doors installed throughout Neverland Ranch, where Safechuck claims
they had sex inside his castle, pool, attic and train station.
"It happened
every day," Safechuck says. "It sounds sick, but when you're first
dating somebody, you do a lot of it."
Jackson would
repeatedly remind the boys that they could never share anything about what they
did: " 'If anyone ever found out that we were doing these sexual things,
we would go to jail for the rest of our lives,' " Robson recalls him
saying. "I was terrified."
3. Jackson allegedly
staged a mock wedding, complete with rings and vows
Years into their
relationship, which lasted until he was 14, "we were like this married
couple," Safechuck remembers. There was one day when Jackson suggested
they hold a mock ceremony at his condo, where they allegedly exchanged
"vows" and he gifted the boy with a diamond-encrusted gold ring.
"I was really
into jewelry, so he would reward me with jewelry for sexual acts,"
Safechuck says in the film. He claims that Jackson would take him to jewelry
stores where they would pick out rings, acting as if the gift was for a woman.
4. Wade Robson claims
he was ordered to throw out his underwear after they had sex
After moving to LA
to focus on dancing and to be closer to Jackson, Robson was devastated to learn
that the singer had "moved on" to other boys including Macaulay
Culkin and Brett Barnes (both of whom have denied that Jackson sexually abused
them).
"There was
jealousy from me," Robson says. "It was confusing."
After a few years of
occasional encounters, the singer allegedly summoned a then-14-year-old Robson
to his hotel room, where he had sex with the teen. The next day, Robson says
Jackson called him demanding that he get rid of his underwear from the night
before, in fear that Robson's mother would discover it. It was the last sexual
experience they had together.
5. Jackson allegedly
said his relationship with Lisa Marie Presley 'didn't mean anything'
As young children,
both Safechuck and Robson claim that Jackson would try to turn them against
their parents and make them hate women. He gave Robson nicknames such as
"Little One" and "Doo Doo," and would leave him daily faxes
and voicemails saying how much he loved having a friend like him.
Leading up to his
short-lived marriage to Lisa Marie Presley in 1994, Jackson would try to
comfort Safechuck by telling him that he "had to have public relationships
with women" but "it wouldn't mean anything," Safechuck says. The
manipulation continued as they got older, as Jackson allegedly pressured both
men to testify in 2005 that he never sexually abused them after he was charged
with molesting 13-year-old Gavin Arvizo. Although Safechuck declined, Robson
agreed to appear in court, citing an obligation to support his lifelong friend.
Robson continued to defend Jackson three years later in an interview with
Access Hollywood.
https://eu.usatoday.com/story/life/movies/2019/01/25/michael-jackson-leaving-neverland-film-shocking-allegations-sundance-film-festival/2681648002/
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