Justin Hill
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It's not made for anyone else.
I mean, if you're not a fan, you go and see it, you might love it because it's generally quite a good film.
But it is specifically made for fans.
And what I've been saying to people is, is if you remember Bohemian Rhapsody and how that was very, just all the good stuff, that's what this is like.
So it covers more of his childhood than what I thought it was going to.
I thought we were going to predominantly see him as an adult and, you know, Jackson five-year-old.
There is a lot of that, but there's also a lot of his childhood and what you see there is kind of heartbreaking.
Carmen Domingo plays Joseph Jackson and they...
Wow.
Wow.
But the whole concept of this film is it's about Michael finding his voice.
So you see him as a child and you see him kind of like, you know, being pushed to the front.
He's obviously a wildly talented person and you just go on this journey, I guess, with him because then at the end you get that kind of like moment where he like finds his voice and, you know, and kind of like talks back to his father.
But we do get a lot of later on.
And then it finishes on the Bad World Tour, I believe at Wimbledon.
And the ending of the film has got a lot of people talking as well.
It honestly is the best part.
And in a world of A.I.,
You're watching Jafar Jackson, who, by the way, is Jermaine Jackson's son, and I think he realised this is his first big acting gig and he needed to nail this movie, but not just the acting.
He also needed to nail the dance moves and the singing and everything and the look, and he truly does.