'Habit': Paris Jackson is Jesus Christ and Bella Thorne is a nun! And no you're not having a lockdown hallucination
King of Pop Michael Jackson’s daughter is no less a princess and makes quite the headlines. Paris Jackson is all set to star in an upcoming movie, titled ‘Habit’ and Jackson plays the role of Jesus Christ. This will surely be a whole new take on God’s son and the messiah.
Paris is known for being a model-turned-actor as well as a singer. The daughter of Michael Jackson and Debbie Rowe has made appearances earlier on-screen and this is not the first time we will see her in an acting credit. Paris's latest screen appearance includes the MTV series ‘Scream’, which was released in 2019. She was also a part of the 2018 movie ‘Gringo'.
Starring alongside her, there will be Bella Thorne, who is set to play the role of a nun, reports The Sun. In ‘Habit’, Bella plays the character of a young girl who seems to be obsessed with Jesus. For some reason or the other (which will come to light soon) she gets involved in a violent drug deal and finds no way out. She then figures that the only escape from that situation is to pose as a nun and that is when Jesus (Paris Jackson) comes to rescue, helping her through her journey.
Ever since her father died in 2009, Jackson was focused on her music career. But now she is simultaneously working on her acting career as well. Before the entire plan for ‘Habit', we knew more of her as a singer. In fact, she said in an interview that her boyfriend Gabriel Glenn is her inspiration to pursue music professionally. “Gabriel is my muse. I owe a lot to him. I started writing around 13 when I bought myself a guitar. I didn’t really start sharing it or recording it until I met Gabriel," the 22–year-old singer said in the interview.
To this, her boyfriend and inspiration, Glenn said that he was “grateful”. “Paris is the jigsaw piece that completes me as an artist. She creates so naturally and honestly. It inspires me to be a better songwriter. I think having a unique spirit like hers allows us to channel things we’d never receive on our own," he said.