Iron Maiden: Burning Ambition held its world premiere on Tuesday night (May 5) at Cineworld Leicester Square in London. Red-carpet interviews with fans and band members were conducted by Vanessa Warwick, the former host of MTV‘s Headbangers Ball. Pro-shot footage from the event can be seen below.
Iron Maiden‘s official documentary begins a limited theatrical run on May 7. The film traces the band’s five-decade career using unprecedented access to their official archives and is directed by Malcolm Venville (Churchill At War) and produced by Dominic Freeman (Spirits In The Forest: A Depeche Mode Film). Alongside the band, the documentary features on-camera contributions from actor Javier Bardem, Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich, Public Enemy‘s Chuck D, Kiss‘s Gene Simmons, and others.
Key art was created by Spanish illustrator Alberto “Akirant” Quirantes, who previously designed Iron Maiden‘s 50th-anniversary commemorative coin for the Royal Mint in 2025.
In an interview with Australia’s Heavy, singer Bruce Dickinson explained the band’s deliberate decision to stay out of the editorial process: “When we knew there was going to be a documentary, the first thing was that we really didn’t want to be involved in it in terms of editorial or whatever. You have to have a hands-off approach because you want somebody to look at it and tell the story. Obviously, there are so many… this documentary could be ten hours long, but then everybody would lose the will to live. [Laughs] So you’ve got to make the story concise. There are going to be fans who say, ‘Oh, they missed out this and what about that’ — yeah, sure, but for people who don’t know the story of Iron Maiden, this is a great introduction to the band.”
Dickinson continued: “Because of that, we wanted an external take on our career, and you can’t really be fiddling about with that and going in every five minutes saying ‘change this’ or ‘I don’t like that’, ‘Oh, my hair looks messy in that picture.’ None of that crap. We’re not a bunch of poodles. It is a bit warts and all, but I think that’s great. There’s nothing in there that I would want to change.”
During an April 13 appearance on SiriusXM‘s Trunk Nation With Eddie Trunk, bassist Steve Harris was asked why now was the right time to tell the Maiden story on film. Harris said (transcribed by Blabbermouth): “Well, in actual fact, it wasn’t us. It’s about us, but not by us. That’s the difference. So it’s a documentary, which they came to us with an idea that they wanted to do, and it changed a little bit from the original idea. They were gonna do it more about the fans, and it still is, to a certain degree. So, yeah, it’s not by us. They wanted to use our artwork and everything, and it seems as if it’s our documentary. It’s not. I think they really should have put out that it’s a documentary about Iron Maiden, not by Iron Maiden, because it’s not us. We didn’t have that control that we would normally have if we were doing it ourselves, of course.”
Harris added: “Yeah, we cooperated with it and we did interviews for it and all that stuff — we did what they wanted us to do — but if we’d have done it, I think we’d have done it in a slightly different way, and I’ll say no more. But I still think the end result is… Well, I’ll say no more because it preempts whatever. I think people should just go and see it and see what they think.”
When Trunk asked whether the film covers the band’s overall history, Harris said: “Yeah, it’s historical stuff. There’s a lot of historical stuff for the first hour, probably, I suppose. So, yeah, I think people have gotta watch it and make their own minds up, really.”
Drummer Nicko McBrain, speaking to Kerrang! magazine, reflected on the challenge of condensing 50 years into a single film: “When you think about it, there’s 50 years of history to Iron Maiden. How do you tell that story in 90 minutes or so? That’s an awful lot to cram in, but I thought it was brilliant. I was overwhelmed by the whole thing, to be honest. There was a lot of information to absorb, so I was like a sponge.”
McBrain continued: “But the one thing I took away is how wonderful it was to see the fans tell their stories about what we mean, and what we’ve meant, to them. And of course, we have the wonderful Javier Bardem — who’s a great mate of mine — and Lars Ulrich, Chuck D, Gene Simmons, and so many other celebrities, too. But what impressed me the most was the interaction of the fans. There were a couple of moments when they were talking that I actually started to have a tear run down my cheek, and my wife just looked at me and squeezed my hand.”
Founded by Harris in East London in 1975, Iron Maiden has released 17 studio albums, sold over 100 million records, and played nearly 2,500 concerts across 64 countries. The documentary arrives mid-way through the band’s two-year “Run For Your Lives” world tour, which celebrated the band’s 50th anniversary in 2025. The tour continues in 2026 with over 50 shows worldwide, including a one-of-a-kind festival event called EddFest at Knebworth Park, England, on July 11.
