Critics Tried to Bury Michael Audiences Just Gave It 94% and Set Their Souls on Fire
- Critics’ Score: Hovering in the gutter at ~27-35% — same recycled complaints about the estate’s involvement and “avoiding the tough stuff.”
- audience Score: A dominant 94% Verified Hot — real people flooding theaters, laughing, crying, and dancing through the magic.
This is the generational rupture we’ve all felt coming. For years, legacy outlets have pushed a one-sided narrative on Michael — allegations, scandals, the works — while conveniently forgetting how many icons had their own demons glossed over in their biopics. Elvis received 77% from critics, despite heavy family input. Now the same rulebook gets thrown out when it’s Michael.
It’s not criticism. It’s coordinated contempt. A forceful, almost personal hatred aimed at tarnishing one of the greatest entertainers who ever lived. But audiences aren’t buying it anymore. They’re showing up, scoring it sky-high, and reminding hollywood that gatekeepers don’t own culture — the people do.
This film’s success won’t just prove the haters wrong. It will expose how disconnected, bitter, and agenda-driven so much of modern “journalism” has become. The battle lines are drawn: General Audiences vs. Legacy Media. And right now, the people are winning — one popcorn bucket at a time. Michael’s light is still shining, and no amount of low Rotten Tomatoes scores can snuff it out. The souls? Already scorched.