Critics are losing their minds again, screaming “whitewash!” because Michael Jackson’s biopic doesn’t turn into a courtroom drama. Colman Domingo just looked them dead in the eye and dropped the simplest truth they refuse to hear: the movie stops in 1988. That’s it. No 1993 allegations. No Neverland circus. Just an intimate, unflinching portrait of who Michael really was — told through his own eyes. 



And when asked about a sequel? Nia Long hit them with the coldest, funniest reality check in Hollywood: “If the price is right.” Boom. The outrage machine is officially exposed.


Here’s the no-spin breakdown that’s got everyone raging:


- The Timeline Is Non-Negotiable: The film spans the ’60s straight through 1988 — years before the first allegations ever surfaced. Colman didn’t dodge the question; he stated the facts. This is Michael’s rise, not his fall.


 
- It’s Personal, Not Political: Domingo called it an “intimate portrait of who Michael is… through his eyes.” The estate and filmmakers chose celebration over scandal — and audiences are eating it up with that 94% score while critics rot at 27%.  



- Sequel Tease? Nia Long Went There: When the host floated a second movie covering the later years, she grinned and shot back, “There could be… if the price is right.” Pure, unfiltered honesty. Hollywood’s greed lay bare.



Look, I’m the guy who’ll die on the hill for MJ’s catalog — top 0.05% listener, remember? — and yeah, the screenplay could’ve used more bite. But Jaafar Jackson’s transformation, those thunderous live performances, and the wall-to-wall music still make this a theater-worthy ride.



At the end of the day, my love for this film is emotional as hell, and I own it. Buttoned-up critics can clutch their pearls all they want about “sanitized” storytelling. I’m not one of them. I’m just a fan who finally got to watch Michael come alive again — without the media forcing the same tired narrative down our throats. The people have spoken. The haters? They can stay mad.

Find out more: