Salah: Farewell to The King
Release Year: 2026 | Runtime: 59 minutes | Type: Documentary | Where to Watch: Check Movie OTT's live tracker for current streaming availability
What you're actually getting here
Salah: Farewell to The King isn't a highlight reel dressed up as a documentary. It's Liverpool Football Club turning their home dressing room into something closer to a confessional — just Salah, the cameras, and seven years of memories unpacked in the exact room where Champions League campaigns were plotted and title runs were processed. No panel of journalists. No PR handlers steering the conversation. The setup forces something genuine to happen.
What's striking is how much the location does the heavy lifting. Most athlete documentaries stick their subject in a hotel suite or neutral office space. Putting Salah in the actual dressing room where he sat before European finals means he can point at a locker, remember the texture of a moment, ground the conversation in physical space. The film weaves in archive footage of key goals and records — not as filler, but as prompts that visibly shift something in how he talks. There's reportedly a moment where revisiting a particular goal triggers something unscripted, and those are the seconds that separate a club PR exercise from an actual documentary.
Then it steps outside. Onto the Anfield pitch. With his two daughters. He walks them through specific moments from the exact spots where they happened — where the celebrations erupted, where the records fell. Showing a footballer's children the grass where their father did something extraordinary, then filming that conversation, is an unusual creative choice. It reframes what might otherwise be a career retrospective as something more intimate: a family memory being consciously preserved.
Why Liverpool made this film, and what it reveals about the club's documentary ambitions
Released in 2026, Salah: Farewell to The King is an LFC Original — part of Liverpool Football Club's in-house content division. This matters more than it sounds. The dressing room access alone would be off-limits to any independent filmmaker. The presence of Salah's daughters signals a level of personal trust that wasn't negotiated in a boardroom. This is institutional filmmaking at its best: the people inside the story deciding to tell it their way, on their timeline, without network notes or algorithm pressure.
The 59-minute runtime is deliberately lean. Most career retrospectives bloat to 90+ minutes, padding between the good moments. This one doesn't. Every sequence earns its place. That tightness is a creative choice, not a budget constraint — it's the difference between a comprehensive documentary and a focused one. You're not getting everything Salah's done. You're getting what he thinks matters.
Liverpool's All Red Video platform is where the film premiered, though it's since landed on broader streaming services. If you're hunting for it, Movie OTT's where-to-watch tool aggregates live platform data so you're not wasting time clicking through expired links or discovering the title's rotated off a service since the last update. Regional availability shifts constantly, which is exactly why that kind of real-time tracking exists.
Worth noting: the title shares a phrase with Farewell to the King, a 1989 John Milius war drama starring Nick Nolte about an American deserter in Borneo. Completely unrelated. Search results can get muddied, so be specific with your query.
Who should actually watch this
The obvious answer: Liverpool supporters. But that's not where it stops.
Anyone interested in how elite athletes process the end of a defining chapter — not in post-match soundbites but in actual, unguarded conversation — will find something here. The 59-minute commitment is small enough that it doesn't demand much of your evening, but the insights run deeper than you'd expect from a club-produced film.
Sports documentary fans who've worked through the obvious Netflix catalogue and want something rawer — something built on institutional access rather than independent journalism — should seek this out. There's a difference between a doc that interviews an athlete and one that lives with them in the spaces where their career happened.
I keep coming back to the daughters sequence. It's the moment where this stops being about records and starts being about memory — about making something tangible for people who'll grow up knowing their father's career only through footage. That's the thing that sticks with you after the runtime ends.
Where to stream it right now
Salah: Farewell to The King is available across major OTT services, but availability varies by region and platform. Rather than listing streaming homes that may have shifted since this article was last updated, check the where-to-watch widget at the top of this page. Movie OTT keeps that data live, which saves you the clicking-around stage.
The film has a natural home on Liverpool FC's All Red Video platform, but it's also been distributed through wider streaming infrastructure. Platform rotation is constant in sports documentary distribution — films land, stay for a season, sometimes get pulled when rights agreements shift. That's why real-time tracking beats a static list every time.
The practical stuff: FAQs
How long is it? 59 minutes. Short enough to fit into an evening, long enough to go deeper than a typical sports profile.
When was this released? 2026. Recent enough that you won't be hunting through archive listings.
Is it just Salah talking for an hour? No. The dressing room interview is the spine, but there's archive footage of goals and moments woven through, and the pitch sequence with his daughters adds a different dimension entirely. The pacing shifts.
Do I need to be a Liverpool fan to watch? Not required, but it helps. That said, anyone interested in how athletes talk about endings — about legacy, emotion, the stuff that doesn't make it into post-game interviews — will find something valuable here.
Is there a theatrical release? No. This is streaming-only, club-produced content. No box office, no awards circuit, no traditional film-database ratings (which is why you won't find a formal IMDb score). It exists slightly outside the traditional film ecosystem, the way most sports-institution originals do.
Want to know if this is streaming near you? Check Movie OTT's current listings — the platform data updates as services add or remove titles.
