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The poster for Netflix’s Trainwreck: The Astroworld Tragedy, a new documentary examining the fatal 2021 crowd surge at Travis Scott’s Houston festival. (Courtesy Netflix) |
Netflix is set to revisit one of live music’s darkest nights with Trainwreck: The Astroworld Tragedy, the latest installment in its Trainwreck documentary series. The film, premiering June 10, retraces the November 2021 crowd surge at Travis Scott’s Astroworld festival in Houston that left 10 concertgoers dead and hundreds more injured.
Directed by Emmy winner Leslie Chilcott, Trainwreck: The Astroworld Tragedy draws on interviews with survivors, paramedics and festival staff to provide an unflinching look at how a record-breaking crowd overwhelmed safety measures.
The newly released trailer begins with the festival’s electric build-up: “He’s the messiah of music,” one fan intones, while another recalls the “unparalleled experience” of Scott’s live shows. Tickets for the sold-out event vanished in 30 minutes, underscoring its feverish appeal to Houston’s youth.
But jubilation gives way to panic. As gates opened, onlookers describe “overwhelming chaos” at entry points, and an attendee recalls feeling “your whole body move forward” in a surging mass. Narration warns of a “wave effect” that turned celebration into catastrophe. Distressing audio — including frantic 911 calls and pleas to stop the show — punctuates the trailer, as a reporter grimly observes, “People are dead and hundreds others hurt.”
The preview also raises pointed questions about festival management: “You guys were in charge of this. What was the failure?” One survivor, speaking on camera for the first time, says he “never spoke about it before” but now wants “people to know the truth.”
The tragedy has spawned more than 2,500 civil lawsuits alleging negligence and inadequate crowd control. While Scott has settled several claims, dozens remain pending, and Texas prosecutors continue to review potential criminal charges tied to the disaster.
Watch the trailer below.