
Disney, magna studios and Sony Music Vision have announced a new documentary following Oasis, with the currently untitled film set to open in select IMAX and cinemas worldwide from 11 September before streaming on Disney+ internationally later this year.
Presented by Disney+, the feature will follow Liam and Noel Gallagher’s Oasis Live ’25 reunion tour, capturing one of the biggest British music comebacks in recent memory. The film is created by Steven Knight, best known for Peaky Blinders, and directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace, whose credits include Shut Up and Play the Hits and Meet Me in the Bathroom.
The documentary promises rehearsal, backstage and onstage access, alongside the first joint interviews with Noel and Liam in more than 25 years. It will also explore the emotional pull of Oasis’ music and the impact of the reunion on fans across generations.
Knight said the film captures “the spirit and emotion of a global cultural moment”, adding that he wanted to tell the story of the brothers and the band, but also the fans whose lives have been changed by their music.
For CultureCues, this is exactly the kind of big-screen music moment that reaches beyond the core fanbase. Oasis are not just a band people listen to. Their songs are tied to car journeys, nights out, football crowds and teenage bedrooms. For many, this documentary will not just be about the reunion, but about where they were when those songs first became part of their lives.
The Disney+ angle also makes this feel bigger than a standard tour documentary. After the cinema release, the film will stream exclusively on Disney+ internationally and on Hulu and Disney+ in the U.S., giving fans who made it to the tour and those who watched from afar a chance to step back into the noise.
The Oasis documentary opens in select IMAX and cinemas worldwide from 11 September, before streaming on Disney+ later this year.
Nikki Murray is a UK-based writer, screenwriter and founder & editor of CultureCues, covering film, television, music and pop culture. Her work focuses on storytelling and the moments shaping modern entertainment.