Skip to content
Search

Michael Jackson Moonwalks to Stardom and Confronts His Dad in New Biopic Trailer

The long-in-the-works Michael, which stars the King of Pop’s nephew Jaafar Jackson, is set to hit theaters in April

Michael Jackson Moonwalks to Stardom and Confronts His Dad in New Biopic Trailer
The long-in-the-works Michael, which stars the King of Pop’s nephew Jaafar Jackson, is set to hit theaters in April

The official trailer for Antoine Fuqua’s long-in-the-works Michael Jackson biopic has arrived ahead of the film’s release on April 24.

The clip offers the most comprehensive look so far at Michael, which will feature Jaafar Jackson — the late star’s nephew — in the title role. While the previously-released Michael teaser appeared to offer a surprisingly upbeat and rosy view of Jackson’s life and career, this new trailer hints at some of turmoil underneath, while still stressing the King of Pop’s love of music and myriad achievements.


Most notably, the trailer highlights Jackson’s complicated relationship with his father and manager, Joe Jackson (played by Colman Domingo). Early on, it shows how Joe — who allegedly abused Jackson — shaped his sons into the Jackson 5, while later it finds him trying to control Michael’s burgeoning solo career.

“I need to think,” Michael says after Joe puts forth a plan for the Jackson family’s pop domination. “I told you what to think,” Joe retorts.The rest of the clip comprises a montage filled with memorable career highlights, lowlights, and some of the more oddball moments from Jackson’s career: His first moonwalk, his massive Grammy haul for Thriller, studio session with Quincy Jones (Kendrick Sampson), the apparent aftermath of the his hair lighting on fire during a commercial shoot, and story time with his pet chimpanzee, Bubbles.

Along with Jaafar Jackson, Domingo, and Sampson, Michael is set to star Nia Long as Jackson’s mom, Katherine Jackson; Miles Teller as his lawyer, John Branca; Larenz Tate as Motown founder Berry Gordy; Laura Harrier as music executive Suzanne de Passe; and Kat Graham as Diana Ross.

Michael has been in the works for several years, with production originally wrapping in May 2024. Afterwards, however, Puck reported that the Jackson estate discovered that the film violated a decades-old legal agreement with the family of Jordan Chandler, who accused Jackson of molesting him when he was 13. (The case eventually settled.)

The agreement stipulated that Chandler’s story would never be dramatized, and the original Michael script purportedly was the case central to the film’s third act, with Jackson portrayed as a victim of extortion. Extensive reshoots followed, and the film’s original March 2025 release date was pushed to April 2026.

Along with the troubled production, Michael has also faced criticism from Jackson’s daughter, Paris, who distanced herself from the project last year. Paris said she read an early script and provided notes about inaccuracies and “full-blown lies,” but producers ignored her concerns.

“The film panders to a very specific section of my dad’s fandom that still lives in the fantasy,” she said. “And they’re going to be happy with it.”

More Stories

Honoring the Music That Made Us
VICTOR JUHASZ

Honoring the Music That Made Us

During my first presidential campaign, I became a bit particular — maybe even a little superstitious — about my debate-day rituals. I had to get in a quick workout, and always ordered the same dinner. And then, in the half hour or so before the main event, I’d set aside whatever notes and talking points my staff had given me, put on some earbuds, and just listen to some music.

Initially, I listened to a handful of jazz classics — Miles Davis’ “Freddie Freeloader,” John Coltrane’s “My Favorite Things.” But over time, I discovered that rap was the thing that got my head in the right place. A couple of songs about defying the odds and putting it all on the line — Jay-Z’s “My 1st Song” and Eminem’s “Lose Yourself” — were always in the rotation, maybe because they felt suited to my early underdog status. Sitting alone in the back of the Secret Service SUV on my way to the venue, nodding to the beat, I would feel the pomp and circumstance and artifice of my immediate surroundings melt away. I’d find my mind returning to those things that were most essential to me — the friends and family that had shaped me; the values and ideals that drove me; and all the forgotten voices of people across the country that I hoped to someday represent.

Keep ReadingShow less
Drake’s ‘Iceman’ Trilogy Turns ‘Not Like Us’ Inside Out
WIREIMAGE

Drake’s ‘Iceman’ Trilogy Turns ‘Not Like Us’ Inside Out

By now, the events of May 2024 have hardened into rap mythology. As the story goes, someone close to Drake leaked “Family Matters” to Kendrick Lamar ahead of its release, allowing Kendrick to engineer the devastating one-two punch of “Meet the Grahams” and “Not Like Us” with near-cinematic precision. On the latter song, Kendrick is no longer battling Drake so much as narrating his death. “I see dead people,” he taunts on the song’s opening line, transforming Drake from rap rival into corpse before the public had even processed what was happening.

Kendrick’s war with Drake — the rap battle that refuses to end — was preoccupied with annihilation, the total elimination of Drake as a cultural figure. And for a time, it appeared to work. Allegations of pedophilia and grooming became permanently attached to his public image, chanted in arenas and clubs with ecclesiastical fervor. Worse still, Drake’s lawsuit against UMG over the allegedly defamatory claims in “Not Like Us” appeared to violate the unspoken rules of rap warfare itself, lending further legitimacy to the idea that, despite a nearly two-decade run atop rap’s commercial hierarchy, Drake would always remain an outsider to “the culture.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Young Dolph Shooter Pleads Guilty, Concluding Rapper’s Murder Case

EW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 30: Young Dolph performs during Rolling Loud New York 2021 at Citi Field on October 30, 2021 in New York City.

(Photo by Jason Mendez/Getty Images)

Young Dolph Shooter Pleads Guilty, Concluding Rapper’s Murder Case

The Tennessee man who previously admitted to shooting Young Dolph pleaded guilty Friday to charges stemming from the rapper’s 2021 death, bringing the murder case to its conclusion.

Cornelius Smith Jr. pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in a plea deal with Memphis prosecutors, nearly two years after Smith admitted on the witness stand that he and co-defendant Justin Johnson shot Young Dolph during a daytime ambush at a Memphis bakery; Smith served as the main witness at the trial of Johnson, who was later convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

Keep ReadingShow less
Drake, Gracie Abrams, Rostam, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week
Simone Joyner/Getty Images/ABA

Drake, Gracie Abrams, Rostam, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week

Welcome to our weekly rundown of the best new music — featuring big singles, key tracks from our favorite albums, and more. In case you missed it, Drake surprise-dropped three entire albums today, making sure to include a single girl summer club anthem in there. Meanwhile, Gracie Abrams gives us a look inside the mind of a daughter from hell, and Rostam reunites with Clairo for a hopeful look at the future. Plus, new tunes from Towa Bird, Kevin Morby, Becky G, Eartheater, and the Mountain Goats.

Drake, “Hoe Phase” (YouTube)

Keep ReadingShow less
V and J-Hope Are in Shock Over Drake’s BTS Shoutout on ‘Iceman’

Jung Kook, Jin, V, Suga, RM, Jimin, and j-hope of BTS

Todd Owyoung/NBC/Getty Images

V and J-Hope Are in Shock Over Drake’s BTS Shoutout on ‘Iceman’

On Friday, Drake released his new album Iceman — and surprise-released two more records: Habibti and Maid Of Honour. The internet is currently reacting to this massive feat — and that includes BTS, who received a shoutout on the Iceman opener “Make Them Cry.”

The reaction came from BTS’ V and J-Hope, posted via V’s Instagram story (a fan posted it on YouTube below). They stand in front of the camera, listening to “Make Them Cry,” head-banging with hats on. But as Drake approaches the fourth line of the first verse — “I’m feeling like BTS ’cause it took the whole career for me to be so discovered” — they freeze, staring at each other in disbelief.

Keep ReadingShow less