What also came through was the complexity of the relationship. Joe had a vision for his boys and it was through this vision and discipline that they rose from poverty. It did benefit the boys but Joe took it too far.
I will add that my BPD mother didn't beat me or use a belt like Joe did. She was different, but I think a common effect is that a child doesn't feel emotionally safe with a parent who has inconsistent behavior.
Jaafar Jackson did a superb job in the role. While many people can impersonate MJ, they can not bring the emotion of being his nephew into the role. How he did this was truly moving. It was not just an acting job to him.
I saw clips of Jaafar on YouTube. He's a very talented person! Thanks for letting me know what you thought as a fellow fan.
The emotion is something you can't remove from it. Fans can't either. It was so unfair. I don't know if Jaafar knew his grandfather. Katherine is still alive so he must have heard it from her, his dad Jermaine and uncles/aunts. I can't wait to see the movie. I'm glad the videos from Bad and Thriller and the early Jackson 5 TV performances are on YouTube. Did you see MJ The Musical? I would have never heard about it without YouTube. The touring company came through my city but it was sold out quickly.
Myles Frost did a great job & he won a Tony for the role. Clips are on YouTube.I don't know if the musical handled his upbringing.
The late Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys was also abused by his father who coached him, his brothers and a cousin when they were a up and coming band. Brian Wilson had a nervous breakdown and then was abused by a psychologist who took over his life and bank account.
Both fathers were amateur musicians. I don't know if the extreme coaching was partly out of envy or to live vicariously (enmeshment) through their sons - both musical prodigies.
The bpd character in Jules & Jim is the quiet type. The director shows her angry face (Catherine) in freeze frames, innovative at the time, so you don't miss it. The entire movie revolves around Catherine and her manipulative, chaotic behavior. You feel something is missing in scenes without her. The story is flat and dull. You miss the drama too. The filmmaker (Francois Truffaut) is clever to make you feel like the trauma bonded Jules & Jim.
Tell-Hill I also love MJ's music and have been looking forward to the movie. It's interesting that you also picked up on him calling his father by his first name. I did too. I asked my H (who did not have an abusive parent) about that and he didn't notice that. That was interesting too. It wasn't a shared experience for him.
Many languages, not Modern English, have a formal and informal you. If you've taken a foreign language you see this. The formal you is used for strangers, a plural, out of respect and older relatives including parents. In college I took a language in the same language family as my parents spoke. I realized then all my cousins addressed their parents in the formal you but I used the informal you. I called her mom or mama. I never called her mother. I asked my mom why and she said she chose that. It could be enmeshment, wanting a friend or parent and not a child? It wasn't a standard of the language.
It's interesting you called your mother by her first name behind her back. You wanted to separate yourself and create stability for yourself.
I couldn't get away from my mom as a kid. My brother went to a boarding high school when I was 8. I wasn't allowed to have friends. It was just me & her. I couldn't go to our public library that often. I read all the Nancy Drew books our school library had. My mom would let me buy movie magazines and teenybopper magazines in 4th grade like Tiger Beat and 16. I read about the Jackson 5 and other teen acts. I never would have thought they had an abusive parent. I thought they all had charmed lives and were much better off, loved more and treated better than me.


