The Michael Jackson biopic titled Michael and starring the late singer’s nephew Jaafar Jackson in the lead role finally arrived in theaters on April 24, 2026, more than three years after it was first announced. Marketed as an honest and unflinching look at one of music’s most complex figures, the film was expected to address some of the darker chapters of Jackson’s life. Instead, audiences discovered that the movie wraps up in 1988, leaving out the final two decades of his story entirely including the child sex abuse allegations that would come to define much of his public legacy.
The reason for that omission is rooted in a legal oversight that derailed production, triggered expensive reshoots and pushed the film’s release back by more than a year.
What the original film was supposed to include
Director Antoine Fuqua confirmed to The New Yorker that an earlier version of the film opened with the 1993 police raid on Neverland Ranch, Jackson’s sprawling California estate, which took place in the wake of abuse allegations from then-13-year-old Jordan Chandler. Fuqua described filming a scene in which Jackson was treated in a deeply humiliating manner by authorities during the raid.
According to Variety, the original script also included a scene in which Jackson stood before a mirror as police car lights flashed behind him a quiet but striking moment set just after the 1993 accusations surfaced. A second scene reportedly depicted investigators arriving at Neverland Ranch to search for evidence. Both scenes were considered central to the film’s third act, with the allegations reportedly forming a narrative backbone for much of the movie’s final stretch, according to Puck.
Why those scenes were cut
The reason neither scene made it to the final version comes down to a legal clause in the settlement Jackson reached with the Chandler family. In resolving the civil lawsuit which accused Jackson of sexual battery, seduction, willful misconduct, intentional infliction of emotional distress, fraud and negligence Jackson agreed to pay the family roughly $25 million. The settlement reportedly included a provision barring the Chandlers from ever being mentioned or dramatized in a film.
That clause was reportedly overlooked when the script was initially vetted and approved, according to Puck. Once the oversight was identified, production was forced to rework the film substantially, ultimately removing the lawsuit-related content and shifting the movie’s conclusion back to 1988.
The financial and timeline fallout
The changes came at a steep cost. The film had originally been set for release on April 18, 2025. It was pushed back six months to Oct. 3, 2025, and then again after Lionsgate CEO Jon Feltheimer indicated during a quarterly earnings call that the biopic was unlikely to reach theaters before the end of that year. The film eventually landed its April 2026 premiere date.
When the cast reassembled for 22 days of reshoots in June 2025, production costs rose by an estimated $10 million to $15 million, according to Variety. The Jackson estate covered those additional expenses, given that the oversight originated on their end and in exchange, the estate received an equity stake in the film.
The 1993 allegations in context
Jordan Chandler accused Jackson of molesting him repeatedly over a five-month period, alleging that the singer bathed and shared a bed with him, showered him with gifts and trips, and subjected him to sexual contact. Jackson denied the allegations, and the criminal investigation was closed after Chandler reportedly stopped cooperating with prosecutors following the civil settlement. Jackson was acquitted of separate child molestation charges in 2025. The Jackson estate has consistently denied all abuse allegations made against the late singer.
Additional accusations were explored in the 2019 documentary Leaving Neverland, which remains the subject of ongoing litigation.

