Netflix is set to drop one of its most powerful music documentaries yet: Imagine Dragons: Survivor, a gripping three-part series premiering globally on March 20, 2026, that strips away the explosive arena-rock facade to expose the raw, often harrowing personal battles Dan Reynolds has fought while leading Imagine Dragons to worldwide dominance.
The film draws from hundreds of hours of never-before-seen archival footage, therapy-session excerpts (with Reynolds’ full consent), family home videos, and brutally honest interviews with Reynolds himself, bandmates Wayne Sermon, Ben McKee, and Daniel Platzman, ex-wife Aja Volkman, producers, childhood friends from Las Vegas, and mental-health professionals who have worked with him.
Viewers see a young Dan growing up in a strict Mormon household, already wrestling with intense anxiety and feelings of not belonging. The documentary traces his early days busking on the Las Vegas Strip, the formation of Imagine Dragons in Provo, Utah, and the near-collapse of the band before their breakthrough hit “Radioactive” exploded in 2012.
The most devastating revelations center on Reynolds’ lifelong struggle with depression, anxiety, and an eating disorder that began in his teens and intensified under the crushing weight of fame. He openly discusses hitting rock bottom in 2017–2018 during the Evolve tour cycle: “I was performing for 60,000 people every night while secretly believing I didn’t deserve to be there. I was starving myself, isolating from everyone, and convinced I was going to die young.”
The series doesn’t hold back on darker chapters: the public unraveling of his marriage to Aja Volkman, the guilt he carried as a father of four, the 2019 breakdown that forced the cancellation of shows, and the moment he contemplated ending his life during the height of the band’s success. Reynolds credits therapy, medication, and the unwavering support of his bandmates and new partner Minka Kelly for pulling him through.
Bandmates share their own pain watching their frontman suffer in silence. Wayne Sermon recalls: “We’d see Dan destroy himself on stage and then disappear into the dressing room crying. We didn’t know how to help until he finally let us in.”
Aja Volkman appears in emotional segments, reflecting on their complicated co-parenting relationship and praising Reynolds’ vulnerability: “He’s turned his worst pain into music that saves people. That’s the real legacy.”
The documentary also celebrates Reynolds’ activism—his founding of LOVELOUD Festival to support LGBTQ+ youth, his openness about mental health, and how songs like “Demons,” “Believer,” “Thunder,” and “Natural” were born directly from his inner turmoil.
Early reviews call Imagine Dragons: Survivor “unflinchingly brave,” “deeply moving,” and “a masterclass in turning suffering into art.” It promises to reframe Dan Reynolds not as an untouchable rock god, but as a resilient survivor whose greatest strength has been facing his shadows head-on.
This isn’t just the story of a superstar—it’s proof that even the loudest voices can carry the quietest screams, and that healing is possible in the spotlight.
Streaming March 20, 2026—exclusively on Netflix.
