Rosie Beveridge December 6th, 2024 - 1:06 AM
The documentary ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ is confirmed for release in IMAX theatres on February 7, 2025, with special preview showings scheduled for February 5.
Ticket sales began on December 5, 2024.
‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ made its highly anticipated debut at the 2021 Venice Film Festival, where it was met with a standing ovation. As the first officially sanctioned documentary about the band, ‘Becoming Led Zeppelin’ blends newly filmed interviews with surviving members Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, and John Paul Jones with carefully restored archival footage from key moments in the band’s history. Director MacMahon draws a clear connection between the band’s rise to fame and the turbulent times they helped define, it is all underpinned by the dulcet tones of the hit ‘Whole Lotta Love’, the 1969 single from their album Zeppelin II.
Now, under the distribution of Sony Pictures Classics, the film is poised for a theatrical release that will showcase its rich sound and visuals as intended by director Bernard MacMahon. Its set for release in North and Latin America, South East Asia, and the Middle East but no date has been announced for the UK and Europe as of yet.
Notable performances from 1969 at Fillmore West and the Texas Pop Festival are featured, offering a glimpse into the band’s formative years. The film’s hybrid approach, part documentary and part concert film, captures both the band’s rapid rise and the more intimate aspects of their journey.
One of the most powerful elements of the documentary is its focus on drummer John Bonham whose sudden death in 1980, at just 32 years old, due to asphyxiation from alcohol, led to the eventual disbanding of the group. MacMahon’s film attempts to honours Bonham’s legacy, framing his life and untimely passing as an indelible part of the band’s story.
In anticipation of the film’s release, a new trailer has been unveiled.
It opens with intimate, vintage footage of the band’s early years: Bonham behind his drums, Page using his violin bow in a 1969 Fillmore East performance—restored to reflect the era’s cultural significance.The trailer weaves these concert clips with historical milestones such as the Apollo 11 launch, the Vietnam War, and the Woodstock festival, underscoring Led Zeppelin’s rise amid global upheaval.