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Liam and Noel Gallagher's documentary promotion was released on Friday.
Oasis brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher have done their first joint interview in 25 years for their upcoming tour documentary.
Entertainment giant Disney confirmed Steven Knight, Oscar-nominated director of Peaky Blinders, created the feature-length film that will be released in theatres on 11 September.
It will focus on the band's global reunion tour in 2025 where the brothers appeared on stage together following a 16-year break, selling out venues including Wembley Stadium.
Feuds between the Mancunian frontmen led to their break-up following their titanic success revolutionising rock n'roll throughout the 1990s and 2000s.
The comeback tour was the significant milestone fans had been waiting for since their dramatic split in 2009, after years of teasing a possible reunion.
Describing the Oasis tour "the biggest musical event of 2025", a joint statement from Disney, Sony Music Vision and Magna studios said the documentary would feature moments from rehearsal, backstage and onstage.
The concert film, currently untitled, also contains the "first joint interviews with Noel and Liam in over 25 years", the statement said.
Knight said: "I wanted to tell the story of the brothers and the band, but just as important, the story of the fans whose lives the music has touched and sometimes changed forever.
"It is also the story of how music and songwriting can unite generations, cultures, countries and in a time of spite and division, give us all some reason to hope."

Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty Images
Noel and Liam Gallagher, pictured here in 1994, have done their first joint sit-down interview in decades
Noel and Liam performed chart-topping hits including Don't Look Back in Anger and Wonderwall in front of audiences across the US, Australia, South Korea, Japan, Argentina and Brazil, after an initial blitz of UK and Ireland shows.
Nostalgic fans witnessed the brothers hugging and bantering on stage during their gigs, marking a new direction for the rock stars who had spent more than a decade publicly insulting one another.
Their success was expected to fetch the brothers approximately £50m ($68m) each, based on estimates calculated by Birmingham City University.
Concert films have become more popular in recent years with singers turning the stories behind their live gigs into cinema blockbusters, such as Taylor Swift's Eras Tour film and Billie Eilish's 3D movie directed by Avatar's James Cameron.

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