
Michael has crossed $1 billion at the global box office, becoming the first biographical film in cinema history to reach the figure. The achievement marks a new record for the genre and confirms the extraordinary response that the film has received since its theatrical release on April 24.
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As of July 12, the film had earned approximately $371.8 million in the United States and Canada and $629.8 million from international markets, taking its total beyond $1.001 billion. It also became the first Lionsgate release to reach $1 billion worldwide.


A Billion-Dollar Record
Antoine Fuqua directed Michael from a screenplay by John Logan, with Jaafar Jackson portraying his uncle. The film announced its commercial strength immediately, opening with $97 million in the United States and Canada and around $217 million worldwide. That result gave it the biggest domestic opening for a biographical film and the largest global opening weekend for a music biopic.
The film later passed Bohemian Rhapsody, which earned $910.9 million, to become the highest-grossing music biopic. It then overtook Oppenheimer, with its $975.8 million global total, and became the highest-grossing biographical film of any kind. It also became Lionsgate’s highest-grossing theatrical release.
The numbers belong in the record books, though the response surrounding the film says something equally important. Audiences have returned repeatedly, bringing parents, children, longtime fans and people discovering Michael Jackson’s work for the first time into the same cinemas.


The Michael Jackson Experience
The film tells a story that Michael Jackson’s fans know very well. It touches on the major chapters, keeps the tone accessible, and places Michael’s energy above a complete chronological account of his career. Jaafar Jackson, whom we had the pleasure of interviewing a few years ago, gives audiences something only a Jackson could bring. His dancing, gestures and stage presence create a feeling viewers have waited a very long time to experience: a portrayal of Michael Jackson that feels genuinely worthy of his name. Juliano Krue Valdi delivers an equally memorable performance as the young Michael, capturing the talent and presence that defined him from childhood.
The film follows the rise of the Jackson 5, Michael’s career as a solo artist and his complex relationship with his father, Joseph Jackson. Yet its true subject remains Michael himself: the songs, the music videos, the performances and the electric connection he created with an audience.
After the first viewing, many longtime fans found themselves thinking about everything that remained outside the story. Where was The Wiz? Where was Diana Ross? What about the change from the Jackson 5 to The Jacksons, eight Grammy Awards in a single night, “We Are the World,” Captain EO and the many other achievements connected with his career?
The film leaves out chapters that fans wanted to see, and it changes details within certain events. Yet, after that first reaction, another understanding begins to take shape.
The Grammy Awards did not create the relationship Michael shared with his audience. Neither The Wiz nor the sales figures behind the best-selling album in history explain why people loved him. The music created that connection. His performances, energy and presence left audiences breathless.
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New generations deserve to experience some part of that feeling. They deserve to hear the songs and see the performances first. The wider history can follow. Earlier generations discovered Michael in much the same way. They saw a video, heard an album or watched a televised performance, then searched for every available detail. Many of them did so long before the internet offered immediate access to his entire career.
The movie gives younger viewers their own entry point into the Michael Jackson experience. The fact that many continue returning to watch it again suggests that the connection has already begun.
For people who have loved Michael’s work for decades, the film offers a different kind of happiness. It recalls the time when they first discovered his music, when a new video became an event and when each performance seemed to introduce something audiences had never seen.
Watching Michael in a full cinema also allows those fans to recognise one another again. They can hear familiar reactions, applaud the same performances and share memories with people who understand why the music still matters to them.
That shared experience may represent the film’s greatest gift to lifelong fans. It brought them together around Michael’s work once again.


Michael Jackson Returns to the Charts
The film also brought an extraordinary rise in listening. Jackson’s solo catalogue generated 137.5 million official on-demand streams in the United States during the week of April 24 to 30, a 146 percent increase and more than double his previous weekly best. Thriller returned to the Billboard 200 at No. 7, while Billie Jean re-entered the Hot 100. Jackson initially rose from No. 29 to No. 3 on the Billboard Artist 100, then reached No. 1 later in May.
Another record followed when “Chicago” debuted at No. 30 on the Billboard Hot 100. The entry made Jackson the first and only artist to place a newly charting Hot 100 song in six different decades, from the 1970s through the 2020s. Six of his songs also appeared on the chart simultaneously during the film’s theatrical run.
Jackson also became the first artist to accumulate 100 weeks at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. Thriller returned to the top of the ranking for the first time in approximately four decades, contributing to the historic total.
The renewed interest also reached his autobiography. Moonwalk, the only autobiography Michael Jackson published, rose to No. 1 biography bestseller ranking in June, nearly four decades after its original publication.


From Cinemas to Home Viewing
Michael arrived on premium digital platforms on June 9, allowing audiences to rent or purchase the film at home. Lionsgate released the film on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray and DVD on July 14, including a collector’s edition with a 50-page book of photography and an introduction by Jaafar Jackson.
A subscription streaming release will follow on Starz. The platform currently lists Michael among its coming-soon titles, though it has yet to announce an exact streaming date.
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The billion-dollar result gives Michael a place in film history. The records surrounding the music show that the response reaches far beyond a successful theatrical release. People are listening again, reading again and introducing the songs to children who never had the opportunity to experience Michael Jackson during his lifetime.
For longtime fans, the film brings memories back into a shared space. For younger audiences, it offers a beginning. The rest of the story remains there for them to discover, just as every previous generation discovered it: through the music first.

















