A Buried Settlement Clause Triggered a $15 Million Overhaul of the Michael Jackson Biopic Michael

7 Min Read
Michael Jackson movie
Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Lionsgate
  • The Michael Jackson estate paid up to $15 million to reshoot the entire third act of Michael after attorneys discovered a legal clause barring any depiction of accuser Jordan Chandler.
  • The 22-day reshoot scrapped scenes of investigators searching Neverland Ranch, replacing the ending with Jackson at the peak of his “Bad” tour.
  • The biopic, originally greenlit for $155 million, now opens April 24, 2026, and early tracking projects an opening weekend north of $55 million.

Nobody said making a Michael Jackson biopic would be easy. But apparently, nobody told the Jackson estate to read the fine print, either.

Michael, the long-gestating, deeply complicated biopic about the King of Pop, required a series of expensive reshoots to remove all scenes referencing allegations of child abuse against the singer — but not for the reason you might think.

The film, directed by Antoine Fuqua and starring Jackson’s real-life nephew Jaafar Jackson in the titular role, was originally scheduled to start amid the biggest scandal of Jackson’s career. According to sources who spoke to Variety, the movie was going to begin in 1993, when Jackson was first accused of child molestation.

Dramatic? Yes. Legally permissible? Absolutely not — as it turns out.

Michael movie poster

Attorneys for the Jackson estate, which served as a producer, realized there was a clause in a settlement with one of the singer’s accusers, Jordan Chandler, that barred the depiction or mention of him in any movie. A clause that, apparently, nobody caught until cameras had already rolled.

The original version of the film was reportedly visceral in its approach. The opening shot showed the “Smooth Criminal” musician staring at his reflection in the mirror as police arrive at the Neverland Ranch. Another scene left on the cutting room floor depicted investigators searching for evidence at Neverland Ranch. There was even a moment described as showing Jackson staring into a mirror after he had just been accused of child molestation, “capturing his sorrowful gaze as police car lights flash behind him.”

Gone. All of it.

After the late-stage discovery, the filmmakers went back to the drawing board to craft a new ending. The process was further delayed after the house of screenwriter John Logan was damaged in the Palisades fire. Nothing about this production has been simple.

Michael Jackson
Michael Jackson pictured in Los Angeles, California in 1983. Photo Credit: Walter McBride/INFphoto.com

Last June, the cast reassembled for 22 days of additional photography to shoot the new third act and flesh out scenes from earlier in the movie. The new ending? Much sunnier. The last scene is set during Jackson’s Bad tour, following him as he prepares to take the stage for another electrifying performance, according to a source who has seen the finished film.

So instead of a haunting courtroom drama, we’re getting a curtain call. The estate apparently preferred a standing ovation over a perp walk.

That added $10 million to $15 million to the budget, according to sources with knowledge of similar projects. (Michael was greenlit for $155 million.) The Jackson estate shouldered those extra costs because its error necessitated the changes, insiders say. And because it was willing to foot the bill, the estate has an equity stake in the film, according to another individual with knowledge of the production.

This reshoot scramble also explains the film’s repeatedly shifting release date. The reshoots pushed the film’s release from April 18, 2025, to April 24, 2026. Production restarted in Los Angeles, and in perhaps the cruelest twist for a production already hemorrhaging money, it didn’t qualify for state tax rebates.

Michael Jackson Stock
Los Angeles, CA – 8/30/2003 – MICHAEL JACKSON AT HIS CELEBRATION OF LOVE CONCERT AND 45TH BIRTHDAY PARTY. PHOTO by: Jen Lowery/startraksphoto.com

The revamped film now leans into a different kind of drama. The dramatic tension comes from the singer’s relationship with his domineering father, Joe Jackson, who doesn’t want his son’s solo career to come at the expense of the Jackson 5. The film will also explore Jackson’s recovery from the severe scalp burns he received from a pyrotechnics accident during the filming of a 1984 Pepsi commercial, including the painkillers he started to abuse during that period.

As for the child abuse allegations that consumed much of the real Jackson’s later life? The film reportedly sidesteps them entirely — at least for now. It’s unclear how future films would handle the legal battles and abuse allegations that consumed much of Jackson’s final years. King has told the studios he would focus on the singer’s later albums, including 1991’s Dangerous and 2001’s “Invincible,” the purchase and construction of Neverland Ranch, as well as “his love of animals.”

Whether audiences will buy a Michael Jackson biopic that essentially stops the clock before the storm hits is the $170 million question. Early signs suggest they might. Early tracking suggests the film could open at more than $55 million at the domestic box office, and the studio hopes it could wind up with over $700 million worldwide.

One thing is certain: the Jackson estate has proven it will spend whatever it takes to control the narrative. To the tune of $15 million, this time around.