
“Netflix Acquires Rights to Explosive New Oasis Documentary — The Fights, The Fame, and the Britpop Legacy That Refused to Behave”
Netflix is set to unleash one of its most incendiary music documentaries to date: the untamed, brutally honest story of Oasis, the band that redefined British rock in the ’90s and never played by the rules.
From the pubs of Manchester to the main stages of Glastonbury, from drunken brawls to chart-topping brilliance, the untitled documentary will trace the full, ferocious arc of the Gallagher brothers and their band of misfits who set the world on fire with songs that still echo across generations.
The documentary, now in post-production, promises exclusive archival footage, unseen backstage moments, and raw, revealing interviews with those who were there — including, for the first time in years, Liam and Noel Gallagher speaking about the band’s meteoric rise, chaotic brotherhood, and public implosion.
“They were beautiful. They were brutal. And they were ours,” said an insider involved in the production.
The film goes beyond the classic hits like “Wonderwall”, “Don’t Look Back in Anger”, and “Live Forever.” It dives deep into the early days — back when Liam was a swaggering frontman with something to prove and Noel was still writing lyrics on scraps of paper in Manchester flats. It pulls no punches when revisiting the fights, both verbal and physical, that regularly tore the band apart and made headlines around the world.
Netflix calls the documentary a “gritty portrait of genius born from conflict”, aiming to show how dysfunction can fuel brilliance — and how fame can stretch brotherhood to its breaking point.
But it’s not all rage and rivalry. The documentary is also a love letter to the fans who stood in muddy fields, sang along in smoky clubs, and clung to every lyric. It reminds us why Oasis didn’t just make music — they made culture.
“This isn’t just about a band,” says one producer. “It’s about a moment in time that changed music forever. It’s about chaos, connection, and the price of greatness.”
The documentary is set to debut later this year, exclusively on Netflix. For anyone who lived through the Britpop era — or wished they had — this promises to be a ride worth taking.