Stories Written, Moments Captured, Thoughts Framed.

Posts from the ‘Music’ category

MICHAEL (2026): BEAT IT… OR JUST FEEL IT

There’s something quietly Human Nature about a film like Michael. It arrives carrying the weight of a legend, yet chooses not to scream Scream—instead, it leans into something softer, something more felt than forced. And honestly? I’m Rockin’ Robin with it.

Let’s address the obvious. As a standard Hollywood biopic, yes—it feels a little Smooth Criminal in the way it slips past the darker corners. It doesn’t fully show the good, the bad, and the ugly. But here’s the real question—does it have to? Not every story needs to Beat It into submission with controversy. Sometimes, choosing restraint isn’t weakness… it’s intention.

Because when you look at it as a story of survival, of a child pushed into a Thriller of pressure, navigating abuse, exploitation, and expectation… the film absolutely Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough. It captures the journey of a boy trying to remain Ben—innocent, searching—while the world keeps turning him into something larger than life. And that transformation? That slow climb toward becoming a true artist in his own right? That’s where the film is Bad in the best possible way.

And then—Jaafar Jackson.
Give the man his flowers. This isn’t imitation. This is The Way You Make Me Feel level commitment. He doesn’t just perform MJ—he becomes him in the spaces between the beats. The stillness, the breath, the eyes… that’s where the magic lives. It’s not just the Billie Jean walk or the Black or White energy—it’s the quiet Stranger in Moscow loneliness he brings into the frame. That’s not easy. That’s art.

What really worked for me is how the film subtly threads the inspiration behind the music. You start to see how pain turns into rhythm. How isolation becomes melody. How rebellion shapes sound. From the early ABC innocence to the yearning in I Want You Back, to the emotional pull of She’s Out of My Life—you feel the evolution.

By the time you reach Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough, there’s already a sense of an artist breaking free. And when Billie Jean lands, it doesn’t feel like a performance—it feels like a statement. A line drawn. A voice claimed. Leading right into Bad, where he’s no longer asking for space… he owns it.

Could the screenplay have gone deeper? Sure. It plays it safe. It doesn’t fully Dirty Diana its way into the mess. But maybe that’s not the film it wanted to be. Maybe it chose to Heal the World instead of tearing it apart.

And despite all that—here’s where I land.

Watch it.

Not to dissect. Not to judge.

But to feel.

Because there are moments—quiet, fleeting, almost Man in the Mirror reflections—where the screen fades… and for a second, you’re not watching a film anymore.

You’re watching a legend… finding his way back.

AHMED LAIS: A VOICE THAT FOUND ITS MOMENT

Some voices don’t just sing — they remember, they ache, they belong. Ahmed Lais has one of those rare voices.

At just 27, Lais’s journey into the cinematic world is already a compelling story. Many still remember him as the bright-eyed 10-year-old who made his acting debut in one of 2009’s biggest blockbusters. His performance wasn’t just well received — it was extraordinary. He walked away with the Best Debutant (Male) and Best Child Artist awards at the 1st Maldives Film Awards, and earned a Best Supporting Actor nomination at the prestigious 6th National Film Awards — a rare feat for someone so young.

And yet, instead of riding that wave into a long-acting career, Lais chose a quieter, riskier road — music. While others may have questioned his decision to step away from the spotlight, Lais knew that his voice had its own path to follow. He submitted demos, quietly auditioned for high-profile projects, but his defining moment had yet to arrive.

Until Kan’bulo.

Director Hussain Munawwaru, always a keen observer of raw talent, heard something unmistakable in Lais’s voice — a kind of sorrowful warmth, a tender ache that couldn’t be faked. And when it came time to record the film’s most haunting romantic track, Munawwaru knew exactly who should sing it.

Lais didn’t just step up — he soared.

The result is a song that doesn’t merely accompany a scene; it inhabits it. Lais’s voice trembles with longing and loss, echoing the emotional core of Kan’bulo itself. It’s not showy. It’s not loud. It’s true. And that truth lingers long after the final note fades.

For a young man who once lit up the screen as a child, Ahmed Lais has now left a lasting impression as a vocalist. This isn’t just a song in a film — it’s a moment. And it belongs to him.

Here’s to finding your voice — and to finally being heard.

Kan’bulo is set to release on 31 August 2025.