The Gallagher brothers will finally sit down together for their first joint interview in decades, captured in a forthcoming documentary about Oasis's 2025 reunion tour heading to Disney+. Directors Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace, known for their work on "Shut Up and Play the Hits," collaborated with screenwriter Steven Knight to helm the project.
Liam and Noel Gallagher's fractured relationship defined 1990s rock mythology. The siblings' bitter public disputes led to Oasis's 2009 breakup, a split that seemed permanent until their surprise announcement of a reunion tour earlier this year. The documentary promises unprecedented access to the brothers, documenting both the tour itself and the personal reckoning required to make it happen.
Southern and Lovelace bring substantial credentials to the assignment. Their previous work examining musicians and popular culture demonstrates comfort navigating complex personalities and behind-the-scenes tension. Knight, whose screenwriting spans everything from "Peaky Blinders" to the Oscar-winning "Slumdog Millionaire," brings narrative sophistication to what could easily become mere concert footage.
The timing arrives at a cultural moment when band reunions dominate headlines, yet few stories carry the weight of genuine sibling reconciliation. For Oasis fans who grew up through the 1990s, a Gallagher brothers interview represents something previously unthinkable. The documentary format allows exploration beyond simple nostalgia, potentially addressing the creative and personal conflicts that animated their music while documenting whether those tensions have genuinely softened.
Disney+ gains prestige through association with a landmark music documentary while capitalizing on the tour's global momentum. The streamer has increasingly invested in music content, positioning itself as a destination for concert films and artist-driven narratives. This project differs from typical live performance documentation, prioritizing character study and resolution over spectacle, though the tour itself provides natural visual drama.
The documentary captures a moment when rock music's most infamous feud faces potential healing, watched by millions who've waited three decades for this conversation.
