Anchored by sharp, committed performances from Colman Domingo and Miles Teller, and a magnetic turn from Jaafar Jackson in the title role, Michael keeps threatening to break free from its own formula. It’s at its most compelling when it leans into the contradictions, pressures, and impossible expectations surrounding Michael Jackson.
That push and pull defines Michael: a movie constantly at war with itself, reaching for something deeper even as it falls back on familiar rhythms. The concert footage and making-of material are terrific, but there’s not enough of it to raise Michael to Thriller status.
Michael Overview
Michael charts Michael Jackson’s rise from child performer to global icon, culminating in the Bad era, while repeatedly returning to his strained relationship with Joseph Jackson.
Played with unnerving intensity by Colman Domingo, Joseph looms over the film as an ever-present force, shaping both Michael’s ambition and his inability to assert independence. It’s compelling early, but the repetition dulls its impact, especially as Michael’s emotional passivity rarely develops in meaningful ways.
That leaves Jaafar Jackson to carry much of the film’s emotional weight, and he largely succeeds. His physical transformation is impressive, capturing the precision and magnetism that defined Jackson’s performances without feeling like an imitation. More importantly, he conveys a quiet sadness, suggesting an artist grappling with fame while trying to reclaim a childhood he never truly had. The film hints at that inner conflict but too often retreats into safer, more conventional storytelling.
Where Michael finds its rhythm is in the moments connecting Jackson’s life to his artistry. His love of horror films influencing Thriller, his response to street violence shaping “Beat It,” and his fight for visibility on MTV all offer sharper, more engaging insight. These sequences feel alive, giving the film a sense of purpose that extends beyond standard biopic structure. Unfortunately, they’re frequently undercut by a return to familiar beats centered on Joseph’s control.
Director Antoine Fuqua opens with visual confidence, hinting at a more stylistically distinct approach to Jackson’s story. As the narrative progresses, that edge softens into something more conventional, leaving Michael polished but rarely as dynamic as its subject demands.
Music in Michael
When Michael leans fully into performance, it finally locks into the energy its subject demands. These sequences are set pieces that translate iconic moments into something cinematic without losing their original impact. Jaafar carries these scenes with remarkable control, blending technical precision with an internal rhythm that makes each performance feel lived-in rather than rehearsed.
What stands out most is how the film uses these moments to bridge the gap between spectacle and storytelling. The choreography isn’t treated as isolated fan service, but as an extension of Michael’s emotional state. Whether it’s diving into the impetus behind “Beat It,” or the theatrical horror influences shaping Thriller, the film briefly finds a visual language that communicates what the dialogue often cannot. The film also shines a light on how meticulous Jackson was in orchestrating performances.
The frustration is that these scenes feel like glimpses of a stronger film. Just as the momentum builds, the narrative pulls back into more conventional territory, interrupting the flow that these performances so effectively establish. If Michael trusted these sequences more, they could have served as the backbone rather than brief highlights.
Cost of fame
Michael repeatedly circles the idea that greatness doesn’t come without a cost, but struggles to fully explore what that cost actually looks like. The film frames Michael Jackson as someone shaped by control at every stage of his life, from his father, Joseph Jackson, to the relentless pressures of global superstardom. It’s a compelling foundation, but one the film only partially builds on.
There’s a clear undercurrent of isolation running through these sections, suggesting Michael’s identity is constantly fractured between performer and person. The film touches on this through his tendency to form stronger connections with animals than with children his own age, hinting at a deeper emotional disconnect. However, it stops short of examining where that isolation leads, pulling back just as the material begins to feel genuinely revealing.
What the film effectively captures is the expectation of perfection surrounding him. Every performance, public appearance and creative decision carries weight, reinforcing the idea that failure simply isn’t an option.
Still, the film resists pushing this theme to its natural conclusion. It acknowledges the toll of fame without fully interrogating it, leaving key emotional beats underdeveloped. There’s a more complex story here about identity, control, and self-expression, but Michael ultimately only scratches the surface.
A Safer Approach to a Complicated Legacy
For a figure as layered and widely debated as Michael Jackson, Michael takes a noticeably cautious approach. The film acknowledges pressure, fame, and personal struggle. However, it consistently stops short of engaging with the more difficult or controversial aspects of his life. The film only hints at his rivalry with Prince and romances are never even hinted at over the course of the film.
This isn’t just an omission; it affects how the story is structured. By focusing primarily on his rise and creative breakthroughs, the film avoids the contradictions that defined much of his later life. The result is a cleaner, more digestible narrative, but one that lacks the tension needed to fully understand its subject.
Fuqua and John Logan’s script approaches the material with clear admiration, emphasizing Jackson’s artistry and cultural impact. There’s a sense that the story is being protected rather than explored.
What’s missing is a willingness to sit in ambiguity. The film hints at complexity through themes of isolation, control, and identity, but rarely allows those ideas to complicate the narrative in meaningful ways. For a story about someone who constantly existed in contradiction, that absence feels significant. It’s a stark contrast to films like Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere, which lean into internal conflict and creative struggle rather than smoothing it over.
In the end, Michael opts for reverence over reflection. It captures the icon, but hesitates to fully confront the man behind it.
Michael Final Thoughts
Michael is at its best when it stops trying to define Michael Jackson and simply lets him exist in motion. The performance sequences, the flashes of creative inspiration, and the quieter, more introspective beats all point toward a better film. Those moments are often fleeting.
There’s no denying the strength of the performances. Jaafar carries the film with a presence that feels both studied and instinctive, capturing not just the look and sound, but the weight of expectation behind them. Domingo brings a necessary edge as Joseph, even if the film returns to that dynamic too often without adding a new perspective. Together, they anchor a story that frequently feels torn between exploration and restraint.
Fuqua shows glimpses of a more visually dynamic and emotionally probing approach, particularly early on. Yet as the film progresses, it settles into safer rhythms, smoothing out the contradictions that made Jackson such a compelling and complicated figure.
Michael isn’t a failure. It’s too well-acted and intermittently engaging to fall into that category. But it is a missed opportunity. For a subject who redefined global stardom and lived within constant tension, the film rarely matches that intensity.
In the end, Michael feels like a film that understands its subject’s greatness, but never fully wrestles with what that greatness costs.
Michael
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Above Average - 6/106/10
