‘Michael’ tops $977.4M, knocking ‘Oppenheimer’ from biopic history
Lionsgate and Universal’s MJ biopic passes the $965M benchmark and pushes the industry toward a potential $1B first.

Lionsgate/Universal’s ‘Michael’, starring Jaafar Jackson as Michael Jackson, has reached $977.4 million at the box office after two months in theaters, passing Christopher Nolan’s ‘Oppenheimer’ record. For decision-makers, the milestone is a real-world stress test for whether music biopics can reliably scale into true tentpole territory.
After two months in theaters, Lionsgate/Universal’s ‘Michael’ has hit $977.4 million at the box office, passing the $965 million biopic record set three years ago by Christopher Nolan’s Best Picture Oscar winner ‘Oppenheimer’. That is not a small squeak past an old benchmark. It is a category reshuffle, and it lands at exactly the moment Hollywood is trying to figure out which types of films can still reliably pull global audiences.
The headliner behind the spike is Antoine Fuqua’s film, with Jaafar Jackson playing the late King of Pop. ‘Michael’ also posted a biopic record $217 million global opening weekend in late April, with Lionsgate handling domestic distribution and Universal handling the release overseas. After that launch, it stayed a hot ticket for several weeks, even striving alongside ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ as fans showed up for repeat viewings. In the U.S., the film continued posting daily gross totals of more than $1 million until June 14, its 52nd day of theatrical play, and it now stands with a domestic total of $370 million.
To put $370 million in context, that number ranks third on Lionsgate’s all-time domestic charts, behind only ‘The Hunger Games’ ($408 million in 2012) and ‘Catching Fire’ ($424 million in 2013). That matters for executives because it connects a music biopic to Lionsgate’s highest-value domestic performance tier. It is one thing to have a hit. It is another to have that hit behave like a mainstream franchise contender, at least on the domestic side.
Internationally, the film is showing the durability the U.S. run hints at. ‘Michael’ has grossed nearly $600 million overseas, including $70 million in the United Kingdom, $55 million-plus in France, and more than $30 million each in Mexico, Brazil and Australia. It also had a June release in Japan courtesy of Kino Films, where it is approaching $20 million. This is a key second-order signal: the global fanbase for the most famous pop star ever remains strong 17 years after his death, and the distribution windows appear to be turning fandom into repeat, multi-territory revenue rather than one-time curiosity.
The real industry question is whether this is a one-off spike or a repeatable blueprint. Music biopics have become reliable moneymakers for studios, especially in recent years, with films like ‘Elvis’, the N.W.A. biopic ‘Straight Outta Compton’, and the Bob Dylan biopic ‘A Complete Unknown’. Before this year, though, the only music biopic to reach the box office stratosphere was ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, which starred Rami Malek as Queen frontman Freddie Mercury and made $911 million worldwide. In that landscape, ‘Michael’ is now on the cusp of becoming the first biopic ever to gross $1 billion worldwide.
If the theatrical run runs out of gas just short of that record, the source points to a fallback that studios have used when content and timing align. A re-release ahead of its planned sequel would be positioned to push it over $1 billion. For boards, investors, and studio leadership teams, that is a financial lever and a scheduling strategy, not a creative afterthought. It turns performance into options, and options are what get capital committees comfortable when the audience risk curve is hard to model.
Strategically, ‘Michael’ also reframes what executives should expect from star-driven theatrical events in a post-pandemic distribution world where windows still matter. Lionsgate and Universal’s split responsibilities, domestic versus overseas, did not dampen momentum. Instead, the film’s ability to keep daily totals above $1 million until June 14 suggests that the marketing and audience demand were resilient enough to survive competition, sequel chatter, and shifting attention spans. In a market where the word ‘tentpole’ can feel like wishful thinking, this is a measurable counterexample: a music biopic is not just profitable, it is record-setting.
At the peer level, the stakes are straightforward. If you are funding or greenlighting biographical films, you now have a live reference point showing that global scale can show up in this subgenre, not just across legacy franchises. If you are evaluating distribution strategy, the ‘Michael’ result argues for careful territory planning that can sustain performance beyond the opening weekend. And if you are on a board watching how studios turn hits into next-quarter confidence, $977.4 million is a reminder that audience demand can still surprise upward, even when the math previously said the ceiling was lower.
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