OasisThe teaser trailer for Don’t Look Back In Anger, the new documentary about last year’s shock, highly anticipated reunion tour of Oasis, has finally arrived.
Presented by Disney+, the documentary will air in select IMAX theatres and cinemas across Australia and New Zealand in September, followed by exclusive streaming on Disney+ later this year.
The teaser trailer dropped over the weekend, marking the one-year-anniversary since Liam and Noel Gallagher first strode onto the stage together after 16 years, appearing in Cardiff, Wales.
The documentary is set to track the band’s reunion tour, Oasis Live ’25, and, looking at the teaser, find out how it came together. At one point, Noel admits that he doesn’t see himself on stage with Liam.
According to a press release, the documentary film will feature “unprecedented access and never-before-seen footage”; capture the “experience and emotions of the band and their fans across the world,” as well as rehearsal, backstage, and on-stage access, and the first joint interviews with Liam and Noel in over 20 years. You can watch the teaser below.
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Don’t Look Back In Anger was created by BAFTA and Oscar-nominated writer, producer and director Steven Knight (Peaky Blinders) and directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace (Shut Up and Play the Hits, Meet Me in the Bathroom).
“The Oasis world tour united generations, cultures and countries and spoke to a broken world about reconciliation,” Steven Knight said. “‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’ is not only your ticket to the show – it’s a backstage pass and a seat at the table when Liam and Noel sit down together for the first time in 15 years and tell it how it is and how it was.”
Oasis brought the Live ‘25 tour to Australia last October and November. The tour was met with phenomenal demand, with additional shows announced in Melbourne and Sydney. The shows marked the first time that Oasis had performed in Australia in 19 years.
Upon the band’s long-awaited return to Australia, The Music’s Christopher Lewis declared, “This wasn’t late-era Oasis desperately trying to grasp the remaining sand in their hands and watching it slowly slip through their fingers. This was an imperious band revisiting their legacy.”
Check out the review here.






