Skip to content
Search

‘Leaving Neverland’ Director Says ‘Michael’ Moviegoers Turn ‘Deaf Ear’ to Molestation Allegations

“How can you tell an authentic story about Michael Jackson without ever mentioning the fact that he was seriously accused of being a child molester?” Dan Reed asks in interview after biopic’s release

‘Leaving Neverland’ Director Says ‘Michael’ Moviegoers Turn ‘Deaf Ear’ to Molestation Allegations
Kevin Mazur/Lionsgate

The director of Leaving Neverland accused moviegoers of the new Michael Jackson biopic of turning a “deaf ear” to the child molestation allegations against the singer.

Dan Reed, who helmed a pair of documentaries that detailed the accusations against Jackson, criticized the singer’s estate, Michael director Antoine Fuqua, and the moviegoing public in a new interview with The Hollywood Reporter. “How can you tell an authentic story about Michael Jackson without ever mentioning the fact that he was seriously accused of being a child molester? I just don’t really see it,” Reed said. “People don’t care that he was a child molester. Literally, people just don’t care.”


Reed added, “A lot of people, I think, will kind of swallow any misgivings they may have and just sort of say, ‘Oh well, it’s a great jukebox movie’ and just completely ignore the fact that this guy was worse than Jeffrey Epstein.”

Due to an accuser’s settlement with the Jackson estate, Michael was legally unable to venture into the molestation allegations, but in press interviews around the film’s release, director Fuqua has downplayed the lawsuits against Jackson and his estate, saying “sometimes people do some nasty things for some money.”

“For Antoine Fuqua to accuse people of gold digging is kind of ironic. It seems to me all the people involved in this movie are just making bank,” Reed said. “If anyone’s making money, it’s Michael Jackson’s estate and the people who worked on this biographical picture.” Reed added that the subjects of Leaving Neverland, Wade Robson and James Safechuck, “never made a cent from their accusations,” as the lawsuits are still playing out.

When asked what Reed learned during the making of Leaving Neverland, the director said frankly, “I learned Michael Jackson fucked little boys. That’s what I learned.” However, seven years after the documentary’s release, it appears the late King of Pop has turned public opinion: His life story is the focus of both a Broadway musical and a biopic, while Leaving Neverland is not streamable until 2029 due to a settlement between HBO and the Jackson estate.

“I think a lot of people just love his music and turn a deaf ear. And short of having actual video evidence of Michael Jackson engaged in sexual intercourse with a 7-year-old child, I don’t know what would be sufficient to change these people’s minds,” Reed told THR.

“I’m not trying to stop anyone from consuming his music. I’ve never advocated canceling Michael Jackson … I just think if you’re going to enjoy his music, let’s also consider the fact that he liked to have sex with children and see how that affects your enjoyment, in all honesty … I think a lot of people just want to forget about the children and enjoy the music.”

More Stories

Actress Sues James Cameron and Disney for Stealing Her Likeness for ‘Avatar’ Character

'Avatar'

20th Century Fox

Actress Sues James Cameron and Disney for Stealing Her Likeness for ‘Avatar’ Character

An actress has accused James Cameron and Disney for stealing her likeness to create an Avatar character without her knowledge and consent.

Indigenous actress and activist Q’orianka Kilcher, who portrayed Pocahontas in Terrence Malick’s The New World when she was just 14, filed a lawsuit in California on Tuesday. The complaint alleges that Cameron extracted and replicated Kilcher’s facial features from a published photograph in The Los Angeles Times, using it as the basis of the character Neytiri, played by Zoe Saldaña in all three Avatar films.

Keep ReadingShow less
Details of Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni’s ‘It Ends With Us’ Settlement Are Now Public

Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni

Seth Wenig/AP Photo; XNY/Star Max/GC Images

Details of Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni’s ‘It Ends With Us’ Settlement Are Now Public

Blake Lively‘s attorneys have described her settlement with Justin Baldoni over It Ends With Us a “resounding victory,” as the parties submitted paperwork withdrawing the case on Thursday morning.

The agreement was reached Monday, nearly a year and a half after Lively sued Baldoni for the alleged sexual harassment she experienced while filming the domestic violence movie and the alleged smear campaign launched against her during the film’s press tour in summer 2024.

Keep ReadingShow less
Khloé Kardashian Says She Was Drugged at a Coachella Party: ‘I Was So Scared’

Khloé Kardashian

Nisha Johny/Disney via Getty Images

Khloé Kardashian Says She Was Drugged at a Coachella Party: ‘I Was So Scared’

Khloé Kardashian does not have fond memories of attending Coachella. On the latest episode of her podcast, Khloé in Wonder Land, the reality TV revealed why she hasn’t been to the California music festival in over a decade.

In the episode, Kardashian responded to a fan question asking, “Have you ever been to Coachella?” Kardashian confirmed that she has “gone once.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Ted Turner, ‘Mouth of the South’ Who Founded CNN, Dead at 87

Ted Turner.

Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Ted Turner, ‘Mouth of the South’ Who Founded CNN, Dead at 87

Ted Turner, the media mogul and philanthropist behind the cable channels CNN, TBS, TNT, Turner Classic Movies, and the WCW who also courted controversy, died at his home near Tallahassee, Florida on Wednesday, according to The New York Times. A cause of death is not yet public, though Turner was diagnosed with Lewy body dementia in 2018; he recovered from a mild case of pneumonia in 2025, according to CNN. He was 87.

Turner’s vision of a 24-hour news station revolutionized both news and TV when he launched the Cable News Network in 1980, foreshadowing the internet’s immersive news environments. “I worked until 7 o’clock, and when I got home the news was over,” Turner once said, per CNN. “So I missed television news completely. And I figured there were lots of people like me.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Barack Obama Suggests Stephen Colbert Would Be a Better President Than ‘Some Folks’

Barack Obama and Stephen Colbert on 'The Late Show'

Scott Kowalchyk/CBS

Barack Obama Suggests Stephen Colbert Would Be a Better President Than ‘Some Folks’

As he prepares to bring The Late Show to an end, Stephen Colbert reunited with Barack Obama for an extensive interview about current events, aliens, the future of the Democratic party, and the responsibilities of leaders. During the interview, taped ahead of the show’s airing at the Obama President Center in Chicago, Obama suggested that Colbert might do a better job of running the country than “some folks that we’ve seen.”

“I’m looking for a new gig soon and a lot of people tell me I should run for president,” Colbert said.

Keep ReadingShow less