Ozzy Osbourne’s Final Interview Unveiled in New Film

A brand new two-hour Ozzy Osbourne A documentary will be released next month that includes his final emotional interview – as spouse Sharonand his children also reveal the musician’s most difficult struggles with health problems.

Ozzy: “No Escape From Now” will be available for streaming beginning October 7 onParamount+around the world. The documentary is promoted as the “complete story” of the last six years of his life, before he sadly died on July 22, just weeks after his final live performance in his hometown.

During the preview, Ozzy comes up during a straightforward discussion and says, “If my time is ending, I really have no complaints.”I’ve had a wonderful life,” says spouse Sharon, “He had an outstanding career and it concluded in an exceptional manner.

READ MORE: Ozzy Osbourne’s seldom-photographed daughter reveals his ‘greatest sorrow’ in a new movie

READ MORE: Fans of Ozzy Osbourne are moved to tears as the 2025 Emmy Awards honor the rock legend from Black Sabbath.

The lead singer of Black Sabbath revealed in 2020 that he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease and stopped touring in 2023 after undergoing significant spinal surgeries.

He had a fall at his home in 2019 that made injuries from a life-threatening quad bike accident in 2003 worse. “I went straight into it,” Ozzy remembers about the fall, while his daughter Kelly says plainly in the documentary, “he had broken his f**king neck.”

Ozzy and Sharon, together with their children Aimee, Kelly, and Jack Osbourne, openly talk about the late-night fall their father experienced in February 2019 and the significant effects that event had, which ultimately led him to cancel his two-and-a-half-year farewell tour.

Son Jack says that after the accident, he “ended up much worse” following the surgery. Spouse Sharon talks about the times when he struggled to stay motivated as his injuries impacted his mental health. Sharon said, “At that time, the depression was really severe. He’d say, ‘What’s the point in getting up at all? I’m not getting up. I’m not working with the physiotherapist. What’s the point?'”

The musician reveals how “Take What You Want,” his collaboration with Post Malone—begun by Kelly and producer Andrew Watt and released in October 2019—marked a new musical phase in his iconic career. “It got me out of the blues. It helped me. That was the best medicine I ever had at that time,” says Ozzy in the documentary, recalling the making of the song.

In the meantime, Kelly shares how she had to take him to multiple recording sessions with producer Andrew Watt to assist with the process. Kelly said, “I took dad to the studio every day. He would enter the studio located in the basement of Andrew’s house and settle into this chair that Andrew got for him, and it was as if the magic started.”

In a rare interview, Aimee Osbourne recalls how her father’s accident in 2019 changed everything. She said, “He was in the hospital for weeks. To fall like that and not be able to recover as he had before, and then having to call off the tour – that was his greatest disappointment.”

Luckily, Ozzy was able to give one final performance at Villa Park during the Back To The Beginning show, which took place only weeks before his death. The event included both his solo work and classic songs with the original Black Sabbath members, bringing great happiness to fans. Millions around the world watched the concert online. Prior to this, Sharon shared, “Ozzy’s biggest regret was that he never had the chance to say goodbye to his fans.”

The movie’s trailer features him delivering lines with his characteristic humor, never allowing life to become too serious. The former rebellious figure and avid drug user jokes, “The thing about growing older is that I used to take pills for enjoyment. Now I just take many.”

He has also mentioned his wish to do one last show only if “the old Ozzy” could return to the stage. Fortunately, months of physical therapy and preparation made his final performance a huge success, and the documentary will showcase how he ended his career with a victorious finish.

The directors stress that the project was “never meant to be a film released after his death.” However, following his death on July 22, 2025, the documentary has become a celebration of Ozzy’s “bravery, humor, perseverance, and skill – traits that make him a hero to countless people worldwide.”

The film is characterized as an “intimate view of Ozzy’s last chapter” and is directed by BAFTA-winning filmmaker Tania Alexander. As the frontman for Black Sabbath, the native of Birmingham is known for pioneering heavy metal with legendary songs such as Iron Man and Paranoid.

Upon the passing of Ozzy Osbourne in July, his family shared a touching message, “It is with more sadness than mere words can express that we must inform you that our cherished Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning. He was with his family and enveloped in love.”

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