Last Updated on March 16, 2024 by Phil Nobile Jr.
When I was involved in producing Shudderโs Horror Noire: A History of Black Horror in 2018, there were of course titles that didnโt make the edit – films cut for time, or space, or any number of reasons that impact a project of finite time and resources. But one milestone of Black horror that I wished we could include was left out purely because we couldnโt find a good video source for it: Michael Jacksonโs Thriller.
Since its premiere in 1983, the 14-minute music video (directed by John Landis) has never been available in anything other than muddy, standard definition. And so, if for no other reason than the opportunity to marvel at Rick Bakerโs amazing makeup FX in the short, I perked up at the news, glimpsed on Twitter, that Michael Jacksonโs Thriller had been remastered in 4K. Seeing the work of our greatest living makeup artist in such detail is a privilege I didnโt expect to have here in 2022.
Check out this before and after video; the difference in quality is nothing short of astonishing. Is there a demystifying effect to seeing this relic of our childhoods in such clarity? Perhaps, but in a way itโs also like seeing it for the first time. Observe:
The by all appearances exquisite restoration of this seminal crossover moment feels important on a historical level.
Though we donโt know the legal or distribution status of the work, we have seen it in full on archive.org, and recommend heading over there and checking it out for yourself. (EDIT – it's now officially on YouTube!)
