The two-minute teaser, released this morning, opens with grainy VHS footage of a teenage Axl Rose screaming into a microphone in a small Indiana bar, then cuts sharply to the iconic moment he stormed the stage at the 1989 MTV Video Music Awards. From there, the trailer explodes into a rapid-fire montage: sold-out stadiums, flying water bottles at Riverport, the chaotic 1994 Montreal riot, Axl’s infamous late arrivals, the legendary “November Rain” wedding scene, and never-before-seen home videos of Axl writing lyrics on legal pads in dimly lit apartments.
The voice-over is Axl himself, raw and reflective: “I never wanted to be famous. I just wanted to be heard. Everything after that… was war.”
Intercut with the narration are new interviews: Slash speaking quietly about their love-hate brotherhood, Duff McKagan recalling the nights they almost didn’t survive, Izzy Stradlin in his first on-camera appearance in decades, former managers, producers, childhood friends from Lafayette, Indiana, and even ex-partners who speak candidly about the volatility and brilliance that defined him.
The trailer doesn’t shy away from the darkness: clips of Axl’s 1980s arrests, the lawsuits, the canceled tours, the long gaps between albums, and the public feuds with everyone from Kurt Cobain to Tommy Stinson. But it balances the chaos with moments of vulnerability—rare footage of Axl visiting his mother, laughing with his dogs, and quietly playing piano alone in a studio.
Visual highlights include:
- Unreleased rehearsal footage from the Use Your Illusion era
- Polaroids and handwritten letters fans have never seen
- A chilling slow-motion clip of Axl walking off stage in St. Louis in 1991 as the riot begins
- The emotional 2002 reunion moment when Slash and Axl embraced backstage after 23 years apart
- A haunting final shot: Axl, now in his 60s, standing alone on an empty stage under a single spotlight, microphone in hand
The trailer ends with Axl’s voice over black: “Some stories you live. Some stories you survive. This one… I’m still writing.”
Fans are already calling it one of Netflix’s most anticipated music documentaries of the decade. The four-part series, directed by acclaimed filmmaker Alison Ellwood (Laurel Canyon, The Go-Go’s), promises unprecedented access, including hours of unreleased music and Axl’s personal archives.
AXL Rose: The Stories That Shaped a Legacy drops globally on Netflix March 18, 2026.
The trailer link is live now on Netflix’s YouTube channel and socials. Within an hour it’s already surpassed 8 million views and is trending #1 worldwide.
Guns N’ Roses fans, the wait is over. The most controversial, brilliant, and misunderstood frontman in rock history is finally telling his side—uncut, unfiltered, and unapologetic.
