A new two hour Ozzy Osbourne film will be released next month containing his final emotional interview - as wife Sharon and his children also reveal the singer’s darkest moments with illness.
Ozzy: No Escape From Now will be available to stream from October 7 on Paramount+ around the world.
The film is described as the “definitive account” of the last six years of his life, before he sadly died on July 22 just weeks after his final live performance in his home town. In the trailer, Ozzy is shown in the middle of a candid interview and says: "If my life is coming to an end I really can't complain. I've had a great life."
Wife Sharon adds: "He had a brilliant career and it ended in a brilliant way."
Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy revealed in 2020 he had been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease and he paused touring in 2023 after extensive spinal surgery.
He had a fall at home in 2019 which aggravated injuries from a near-fatal quad bike crash in 2003.
“I went smack,” Ozzy remembers of the fall, whilst daughter Kelly says frankly in the film “he had broken his f**king neck.”
READ MORE: Sharon Osbourne 'finding her footing' after Ozzy's death as she shares emotional update
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Ozzy and Sharon, children Aimee, Kelly and Jack Osbourne speak candidly about that late-night fall their father suffered in February 2019 and the subsequent life-changing impact of that accident, which ultimately led to him cancelling his two-and-a-half-year farewell tour.
Son Jack says after surgery following the fall he “came out far worse”.
Wife Sharon talks about times he struggled to stayed motivated as his injuries impacted his mental health.
Sharon said: “At that time, the depression was so bad. [He’d] be like what's the point in even getting up? I'm not getting up. I'm not working with the physiotherapist. What's the point?”
The singer reveals how Take What You Want , his collaboration with Post Malone - instigated by Kelly and producer Andrew Watt and released in October 2019 - kick-started a new musical phase in his storied career.
“It got me out of the blues. It helped me. That was the best medicine I ever had at that point,” comments Ozzy in the film, recalling the recording of the track.
Meanwhile Kelly recalls how she had to drive him to some recording sessions with producer Andrew Watt to help make things happen.
Kelly said: “I took dad to the studio every single day. He would go into the studio in the basement of Andrew’s house and get comfortable in this chair that Andrew bought him and it was like the magic would begin.”
In a rare interview, Aimee Osbourne recalls how her father’s accident in 2019 was life changing.
She said: “He was in hospital for weeks. To fall like that and not be able to bounce back like he had in the past, and then having to cancel the tour - that was his biggest heart-break,”
Thankfully Ozzy did get to play one final gig at Villa Park, the Back To The Beginning show, which was just weeks before his death and saw him perform solo tracks and several alongside the original Black Sabbath line up to the delight of fans. Millions streamed the gig around the world.

Prior to that Sharon admits: “Ozzy’s one regret was that he was never able to say goodbye to his fans.”
In the trailer for the film he is shown speaking with his trademark humour, never one to take things too seriously. A former hellraiser and heavy drugs user Ozzy says: “The thing about getting older is I used to take pills for fun. Now I take just a lot.”
He is also shown saying he only wants to do a final show if it can be “the old Ozzy” up there on stage. Thankfully months of physio and training meant his final show was a huge success and the doc will show how he went out on a high on the stage.
Makers say the new film was “never intended as a posthumous film”.
However, following his death on July 22, 2025, the documentary now stands as a testament to Ozzy’s “courage, wit, determination, and talent – qualities that ensure he remains a hero to millions around the world”.
The film is billed as an “intimate look at Ozzy’s final act” and is directed by BAFTA-award winner Tania Alexander.
As frontman of Black Sabbath, the Birmingham-born musician is credited with inventing heavy metal, thanks to songs like Iron Man and Paranoid.
In a statement at the time of his death in July, his family said: "It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning. He was with his family and surrounded by love."
*Ozzy: No Escape From Now will be released October 7 on Paramount+.
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