Watch: See Jaafar Jackson Play Uncle Michael Jackson in Movie Teaser
Family and fans who wanted a music-forward film about Michael Jackson‘s thrilling rise to global fame that didn’t delve into—or even mention—the scandals that shadow his legacy ultimately got the movie they wanted.
Though director Antoine Fuqua did originally have Michael, in theaters April 24, beginning with the 1993 police raid on the King of Pop’s Neverland Ranch—“I shot him being stripped naked, treated like an animal, a monster,” Fuqua told the New Yorker—then flashing back to Jackson’s childhood and proceeding from there.
Fuqua, however, isn’t convinced of the validity of the child molestation allegations Jackson faced, explaining, “When I hear things about us—Black people in particular, especially in a certain position—there’s always pause.” (The singer was never charged in the 1993 investigation and was acquitted of charges stemming from another boy’s accusations during a 2005 criminal trial.)
But Fuqua was going to go there. Only after principal photography was completed in 2024 did producer Graham King find out that, due to terms of a 1994 settlement Jackson reached with the family of the boy whose accusations triggered the raid, the late artist’s estate—which collaborated on the production—couldn’t participate in depictions of anything having to do with those allegations.
So, reshoots were required and Michael—starring the singer’s 29-year-old nephew Jaafar Jackson—ends in 1988 with Jackson taking the stage at London’s Wembley Stadium, where his Bad Tour touched down for seven sold-out nights.
Courtesy of Lionsgate
“Mike is a complicated person, people have complicated opinions, and that’s fine,” King told The Hollywood Reporter at the film’s April 20 L.A. premiere. “We chose to tell the uplifting story of his triumph in the movie, and that’s what we did.”
Paris Jackson, who is currently locked in a legal battle with her father’s estate over financial matters, has questioned why the film was ever made in a way that rendered it unusable in the first place.
The estate fired back, according to Deadline, stating that Paris had “a complete lack of understanding about how the motion picture industry works and the role of producers in it.”
“It is unfortunate that Paris’s team make false and frivolous objections, considering Paris has and will continue to benefit substantially from the tireless work of the Executors,” the estate said in a March 20 court filing obtained by Deadline. “Paris has already received roughly $65 million in benefits. She stands to inherit many hundreds of millions of dollars more, just as her father intended.”
In the meantime, the 28-year-old—who did attend opening night of MJ the Musical on Broadway in 2022—has let it be known that, while her brothers Prince Jackson and Bigi Jackson attended the film’s Berlin premiere April 10, she is not onboard.
Find out what Paris and the rest of the Jackson family have said about Michael.
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