Chaos d'anthologie: Le festival Astroworld
Original title: Trainwreck: The Astroworld Tragedy
Through firsthand accounts from survivors, medics and event workers, the documentary explores the 2021 Astroworld festival disaster and its consequences.Through firsthand accounts from survivors, medics and event workers, the documentary explores the 2021 Astroworld festival disaster and its consequences.Through firsthand accounts from survivors, medics and event workers, the documentary explores the 2021 Astroworld festival disaster and its consequences.
Travis Scott
- Self - Astroworld Founder and Performer
- (archive footage)
Ayden Cruz
- Self - Concertgoer
- (as Ayden)
Kaia Redus
- Self - Concertgoer
- (as Kaia)
Raul Torres
- Self - Concertgoer
- (as Raul)
Marcial Rivera
- Self - Concertgoer
- (as Marcial)
Sophia Santana
- Self - Concertgoer
- (as Sophia)
Arturo Sanchez
- Self - Concertgoer
- (as Arturo)
Featured reviews
This is a well done documentary do not get me wrong but it is very intense. There were times when I felt I was at the concert. Very Strange.
The victims testimonies teared me up a bit so be prepared for those. The negative reviews mentioned the tone was to sway our opinions towards Travis but we really did not have to, the proof was in this documentary of what happened. Total neglect from involved.
The documentary did what it was supposed to do and that is bring the art in motion to the viewer and that is what the director did here. Towards the end did feel rushed but all in all id definitely recommend watching this.
The victims testimonies teared me up a bit so be prepared for those. The negative reviews mentioned the tone was to sway our opinions towards Travis but we really did not have to, the proof was in this documentary of what happened. Total neglect from involved.
The documentary did what it was supposed to do and that is bring the art in motion to the viewer and that is what the director did here. Towards the end did feel rushed but all in all id definitely recommend watching this.
As "Trainwreck: The AstroWorld Tragedy" (2025 release; 80 min.) opens, it is "November 5, 2021" and Travis Scott headlines Live Nation's AstroWorld festival that he started in 2018. It's the first big event in Houston after COVID, and people are ready to party, and party hard. The venue is massive so what in the world could go wrong? Turns out, plenty... At this point we are 10 minutes into the documentary.
Couple of comments: I remember these events vaguely but had not seen any footage or further analysis of it, until now. This documentary lays it all out in a clear and concise manner, including plenty of interviews with people that were there: festival goers, but also a Live Nation photographer, a professional event planner, and even 2security guards who, believe it or not, were hired the day before the festival started and seemingly without any prior experience in security services. It soon becomes very clear that things are going terribly wrong, with tragic results. Surely someone is going to be held accountable, right? How about Travis Scott, who has a prior record of inciting crowds (we see footage of a prior Lollapalooza show where he incites the crowd to rush the stage, and then, SHOKCER (not), the crowd does exactly that). We see details of the horrendous layout of the site, essentially turning the space into several inescapable death traps. We see texts from Live Nation officials as the concert is starting that they fear the worst, including death. Watching this documentary is not easy and certainly is not a lot of fun. In fact, I felt incensed and angry, as this tragedy did not have to happen, but instead, as one talking head puts it, they "ignored blaring warning signs". For shame.
"Trainwreck: The AstroWorld Tragedy" started airing on Netflix last week. If you wonder how a large music festival botches so much in so little time, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
Couple of comments: I remember these events vaguely but had not seen any footage or further analysis of it, until now. This documentary lays it all out in a clear and concise manner, including plenty of interviews with people that were there: festival goers, but also a Live Nation photographer, a professional event planner, and even 2security guards who, believe it or not, were hired the day before the festival started and seemingly without any prior experience in security services. It soon becomes very clear that things are going terribly wrong, with tragic results. Surely someone is going to be held accountable, right? How about Travis Scott, who has a prior record of inciting crowds (we see footage of a prior Lollapalooza show where he incites the crowd to rush the stage, and then, SHOKCER (not), the crowd does exactly that). We see details of the horrendous layout of the site, essentially turning the space into several inescapable death traps. We see texts from Live Nation officials as the concert is starting that they fear the worst, including death. Watching this documentary is not easy and certainly is not a lot of fun. In fact, I felt incensed and angry, as this tragedy did not have to happen, but instead, as one talking head puts it, they "ignored blaring warning signs". For shame.
"Trainwreck: The AstroWorld Tragedy" started airing on Netflix last week. If you wonder how a large music festival botches so much in so little time, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
This documentary was genuinely so hard to watch as they made the entire thing as emotional as possible 😭, it really felt like I couldn't breathe the entire time and really made me feel like I was there in the awful tragedy. It was very well made and was so sad the entire way throughout, it really gave me so much more insight into the incident and definitely made me think so much deeper about it. Live Nation handled it horribly and Travis really could've stopped performing during his time, even though he couldn't "stop the show", he was was the show, and he could've just put the mic down. Also the black and white forehead rub was a terrible apology. R. I. P to all of the lives lost in the incident 🕊.
This documentary does a solid job capturing individual experiences at Astroworld, but it lacks a deeper investigation into why the tragedy happened in the first place. There's a clear absence of critical reflection on the organizational failures, especially from Live Nation's side.
As someone who has attended many hip-hop shows over the years, I've seen firsthand how dominant Live Nation is in the live music scene-and how little seems to have changed since Astroworld. I went to Rolling Loud last year, also produced by Live Nation, and it honestly didn't feel like any lessons had been learned. Security staff seemed untrained, and crucial aspects like venue selection, crowd flow, and transportation were clearly not well thought out.
Given the intensity of hip-hop crowds, the rise of rage culture, and the continued lack of proper organization, it's not hard to imagine something like this happening again (though I hope it never does). I really hope this documentary sparks serious conversations among concert organizers and show producers about safety, logistics, and accountability in live event production.
As someone who has attended many hip-hop shows over the years, I've seen firsthand how dominant Live Nation is in the live music scene-and how little seems to have changed since Astroworld. I went to Rolling Loud last year, also produced by Live Nation, and it honestly didn't feel like any lessons had been learned. Security staff seemed untrained, and crucial aspects like venue selection, crowd flow, and transportation were clearly not well thought out.
Given the intensity of hip-hop crowds, the rise of rage culture, and the continued lack of proper organization, it's not hard to imagine something like this happening again (though I hope it never does). I really hope this documentary sparks serious conversations among concert organizers and show producers about safety, logistics, and accountability in live event production.
How is this real? The nurse in the Astroworld doc was so out of pocket. She's talking about a literal tragedy where people died... then they randomly show her twerking?? Completely disrespectful and unnecessary. It made the whole thing feel unserious. She's not the main character - she's supposed to be a professional. Who edited this and thought, "Yep, this fits"? Embarrassing. Just... why? Felt more like clout-chasing than honoring victims. Totally killed the tone.
This was a moment to show care and respect, not promote yourself. If you're in a tragedy doc, act like it. Not everything needs a spotlight.
This was a moment to show care and respect, not promote yourself. If you're in a tragedy doc, act like it. Not everything needs a spotlight.
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- Fiasco total: La tragedia de Astroworld
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Color
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