From the moment the first notes of the trailer hit and a silhouette struck that signature pose, I felt an electric jolt of nostalgia, awe and cautious excitement. Because this isn’t just another celebrity biopic. This is the life of Michael Jackson, the King of Pop, spun through the lens of cinema for the first dramatic time. The upcoming film Michael has unveiled its first trailer, and it spans decades of his career with ambition, passion and a touch of risk.
The trailer opens smartly with youthful joy, choreographed to precision and that unmistakable rhythm of a star being born. It follows Jackson from his roots in the Jackson 5, through solo breakthrough albums, triumphant performances and to the darker corners of being a celebrity. We see echoes of the red-leather jacket, the moonwalk under spotlights and crowds that scream just to hear his name. We’re witnessing not just the hits, but the shape of a career that evolved, exploded and in so many ways defined an era. According to press reports, the film covers over thirty of his songs. What stands out in the trailer is how it tries to capture the dual life of an icon. The performer on stage and the man behind the myth. There are moments of triumph and sheer spectacle, but also glimpses of solitude, of expectation and of dancing under pressure.
Casting his nephew Jaafar Jackson in the lead role feels like a bold move. In the trailer you can see that familiar silhouette re-emerge, familiar moves replicated and the voice of a legend echoed. The film is directed by Antoine Fuqua and written by John Logan, names that hint at a cinematic approach with serious dramatic weight. If you listen carefully, the trailer’s tone is cinematic rather than purely celebratory. There’s grandeur, there’s spectacle, but also an undertone of introspection. The question hovering behind the visuals is, What does it cost to live forever on stage?
No story of Michael Jackson can skip the controversy. None of it is easy, but all of it is part of the story. The marketing for the biopic clearly places an emphasis on his music, creative evolution and his meteoric rise. But from the reporting, the trailer gives little overt attention to the allegations and legal battles that have shaped much of his legacy. As a writer who lives in the cracks of character and myth, I’m curious how the film will balance the thrill of performance with the messy humanity of the man. Because Jackson’s arc is far more than high-energy dance routines and chart-topping records. It’s about a life lived under a spotlight, maybe larger than any one person can bear.
For fans of Michael Jackson, and for anyone who cares about pop-culture history, this trailer is a moment. It’s an invitation, to re-watch, to re-listen, to reconsider. It’s a chance to step back into that red jacket, to feel the surge of a crowd, to remember the first time you heard “Billie Jean” or saw the moonwalk live (on TV, maybe in a blur of tape and teenage awe). And it’s also a reminder that even icons are human. They stumble, rise, change. A biopic like this promises a mirror, shiny, dramatic, maybe flawed, but one we can stare into and ask: What did it mean to be him? And what does it mean now?
Yes, the spectacle is real. The choreography, the costumes, the era-spanning arcs, they’re all here. But what gives me pause (in a good way) is the film’s ambition to do more than re-tell the hits. It wants to feel the story. The first trailer nails tone, excitement, reverence, but leaves questions open. The biggest one: will it dig deep enough? Because Michael Jackson’s life wasn’t just a string of unforgettable performances, it was a story of genius, expectation, isolation and transformation. If the film can hold all that and the trailer suggests that it wants to, then we might be in for something more than a biopic. We might be in for a cinematic portrait of a legend trying to outrun himself.
So, if you’re ready to moonwalk back in time, to revisit the red leather, the glitter, the crowds, and the man behind them, keep your eyeballs locked on this one. Because when the lights go down and the first strains of “Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough” hit, you’re in for one hell of a ride.
“This is your story. I know your past and embrace the future.” the voice-over in the trailer.
Strap in. It’s going to be wild.
