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Michael Jackson biopic smashes box office record

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Michael Jackson biopic smashes box office record
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The Michael Jackson biopic 'Michael' has set a new box office record for the genre, earning $217 million globally in its opening weekend and surpassing previous records held by 'Bohemian Rhapsody' and 'Oppenheimer'. The film, starring Jackson's nephew Jaafar Jackson and backed by the singer's estate, features original vocals and focuses on his music and relationship with his father. It has received strong audience approval but mixed critical reviews, with a Rotten Tomatoes score of 38% from critics and 97% from audiences. Legal constraints due to a rediscovered non-disclosure agreement led to significant rewrites and reshoots, resulting in the film concluding in 1988, before any abuse allegations emerged.

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Michael Jackson biopic smashes box office record5 hours agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleSteven McIntoshEntertainment reporterUniversalJaafar Jackson, the King of Pop's nephew, was praised for his portrayal of the singer in MichaelThe new musical film about Michael Jackson has stormed the worldwide box office, scoring the highest opening weekend ever for a biopic.The singer's nephew Jaafar Jackson portrays him in Michael, which has taken $217m (£160m) globally since it opened on Wednesday.Queen musical Bohemian Rhapsody, which launched with $124m (£91m) in 2018 and starred Rami Malek as Freddie Mercury, previously held the box office record for a musical biopic.But Michael also surpassed the $180m (£133m) taken by 2024's Oppenheimer, giving the King of Pop the biggest worldwide opening weekend for a biopic of any kind.Adam Fogelson, chairman of the film's US distributor Lionsgate, said: "You don't deliver this figure unless you're seeing huge numbers across every conceivable demographic. [Audiences] are clearly having a blast."The film has gone down much better with audiences than it did with critics, several of whom complained that it depicted a "sanitised" version of Jackson's career.Reviews aggregator Rotten Tomatoes recorded a significant gap between the 38% average score awarded by critics, and the 97% average rating from audiences.The film's release follows a string of musical biopics over the last decade, which are seen by Hollywood as reliable box office hits.Queen, Sir Elton John, Bob Dylan, Aretha Franklin, Elvis Presley, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Marley, Amy Winehouse, NWA, Robbie Williams and Whitney Houston have all received the cinematic treatment in recent years.Michael is financially backed by the late superstar's estate and uses his original vocals for the musical numbers, which dominate the film.Getty ImagesJackson, pictured at the Super Bowl in 1993, is best known for hits such as Billie Jean, Thriller and Beat ItMichael does not include any mention of the child sexual abuse accusations that were made against the singer.Jackson always maintained his innocence, and was found not guilty of child molestation in 2005.Filmmakers originally intended to include references to some of the allegations, but the footage was scrapped after the rediscovery of a historic non-disclosure agreement Jackson made with one of his accusers. The third act of Michael had been due to centre on accusations made by Jordan Chandler in the 1990s, but a settlement Jackson made with the boy's family at the time included a clause that prohibited the singer's estate ever mentioning him in any movie. The film was reworked and a series of reshoots took place after the discovery, and Michael now instead concludes in 1988, before any accusations were made.Director Antoine Fuqua told Deadline over the weekend that the rediscovery of the NDA led to a "tough period" because the team had to "rethink everything"."All movies have different challenges, but this one was unique," he said, adding that the team got around the issue by refocusing on Jackson's musical career.The resulting film leans heavily on recreated concert performances and examines the strained relationship with his father Joseph, played in the film by Oscar nominee Colman Domingo.The costly reshoots contributed to the film's sizeable price tag, reported to be around $200m (£148m), making it one of the most expensive biopics of all time.Michael opened on the same weekend throughout most of…

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