Bruce Dickinson Explains Iron Maiden’s Hands-Off Approach to ‘Burning Ambition’ Doc
The metal legends deliberately kept their distance from the filmmaking process to let the story speak for itself.
Iron Maiden frontman Bruce Dickinson says the band made a conscious decision to stay out of the editorial process for their new documentary, Iron Maiden: Burning Ambition, directed by Malcolm Venville and hitting cinemas on Thursday, May 7. Dickinson told the outlet Heavy that Maiden wanted an outside perspective on their career rather than a carefully managed self-portrait, describing the result as ‘a bit warts and all' and saying there is nothing in the film he would want changed.
Why Iron Maiden Stepped Back From Their Own Story
Dickinson was direct about the reasoning. ‘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,' he said. ‘You have to have a hands off approach because you want somebody to look at it and tell the story.' He acknowledged that the full scope of Maiden's career could fill far more screen time than a single film allows, noting that a ten-hour cut would cause everyone to ‘lose the will to live,' but framed the concise version as an ideal entry point for viewers who don't already know the band's history.
The singer was equally blunt about what the band refused to do during production. ‘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,' he said. ‘Oh, my hair looks messy in that picture! None of that crap. We're not a bunch of poodles.' The result, in his view, is a film that benefits from that restraint.
Famous Faces and Rarely Seen Footage
Burning Ambition is described as the definitive look at the band's career, drawing on rarely seen footage and new interviews with the members themselves. The documentary also features commentary from a notable roster of famous fans, including actor Javier Bardem, Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich, Public Enemy's Chuck D, and Anthrax guitarist Scott Ian.
The combination of insider access and outside voices fits the approach Dickinson described. By bringing in figures from film, hip-hop, and the wider metal world, the documentary frames Maiden's influence across cultural lines rather than simply within the genre.
Old School at the Core
Dickinson used the documentary conversation to restate something Maiden have long made clear through their actions: the live show remains the irreducible center of what they do. ‘The core of Iron Maiden has always been old school, on stage, in your face and that won't ever change,' he said. ‘If it's going to be an Iron Maiden show, then it's gonna be live.'
He offered a telling illustration of bassist and founder Steve Harris's mindset on stage. ‘Steve is on stage playing to 80,000 people and he might as well be playing the Cart & Horses in Stratford because he's got the same attitude,' Dickinson said. The Cart & Horses in Stratford is the east London pub where Maiden played some of their earliest gigs in the late 1970s, making the reference a pointed one about how little the band's internal compass has shifted across five decades.
Dickinson also noted that while the band engages with fans through various modern media channels, those tools are supplementary. The stage is where Maiden's identity is defined, regardless of screen size or production scale.
What we know
- Iron Maiden: Burning Ambition is directed by Malcolm Venville and opens in cinemas on Thursday, May 7.
- The documentary features rarely seen footage, new interviews with the band, and contributions from Javier Bardem, Lars Ulrich, Chuck D, and Scott Ian.
- Bruce Dickinson told Heavy that the band deliberately avoided editorial involvement in the film.
- Dickinson said there is nothing in the finished documentary he would want to change.
- Classic Rock magazine has published a feature on the making of the film, with the issue including a Burning Ambition poster and an Eddfest sticker.
The take
Iron Maiden's decision to hand over editorial control of Burning Ambition fits a pattern that the best rock documentaries have followed for decades. The films that endure, from The Last Waltz to Metallica's Some Kind of Monster, tend to be the ones where the subjects resisted the urge to sand down the rough edges. When bands control their own narrative too tightly, the result usually feels like a promotional reel. Maiden's instinct to step back is, in that sense, a creatively sound one, and Dickinson's ‘warts and all' framing suggests Venville was given genuine latitude.
The choice of Malcolm Venville as director is also worth noting in context. Venville has worked across commercial and documentary formats, and bringing in an outside eye rather than a music-world insider reinforces the band's stated goal of getting an external perspective.
The roster of famous fans is telling, too. Lars Ulrich's presence is expected given Metallica's well-documented debt to the New Wave of British Heavy Metal, but Chuck D's inclusion underscores something that often gets overlooked: Maiden's influence on hip-hop production and sampling culture, particularly in the 1980s and 1990s. That cross-genre reach is part of what makes a documentary about this band genuinely interesting to audiences beyond the metal faithful, which is presumably the point of a theatrical release rather than a streaming drop.
Why it matters
For Classic Rock and metal fans, Burning Ambition arrives at a moment when the documentary format has become one of the primary ways legacy acts reach new audiences. A theatrically released film with a hands-off creative approach and a diverse set of voices has a better chance of functioning as a genuine cultural document rather than a merchandise tie-in. Maiden's willingness to let an outside director tell their story, uncomfortable moments included, sets a standard that other bands considering similar projects would do well to notice.
What's next
Iron Maiden: Burning Ambition opens in cinemas on Thursday, May 7. The band also has their Eddfest event on the horizon, covered in the same issue of Classic Rock magazine that accompanies the documentary's release.
Frequently asked questions
When does Iron Maiden: Burning Ambition come out?
Iron Maiden: Burning Ambition opens in cinemas on Thursday, May 7.
Who directed the Iron Maiden documentary?
The documentary was directed by Malcolm Venville.
Who appears in Iron Maiden: Burning Ambition besides the band?
Famous fans featured in the documentary include actor Javier Bardem, Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich, Public Enemy's Chuck D, and Anthrax guitarist Scott Ian.
Why didn't Iron Maiden have more control over their documentary?
Bruce Dickinson said the band deliberately chose a hands-off approach because they wanted an external perspective on their career rather than influencing the editorial direction themselves.
What did Bruce Dickinson say about the finished documentary?
Dickinson described it as ‘a bit warts and all' and said there is nothing in the film he would want to change.