Menu
Billie Eilish - Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour (Live in 3D) Poster

Billie Eilish - Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour (Live in 3D)

Billie Eilish and James Cameron reinvent the concert experience.
2026 | 114m | English

(2549 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 9 (history)

Details

Captured during Billie Eilish's sold-out world tour, a concert experience from one of the most celebrated and successful artists of her generation, presented in immersive 3D.
Release Date: May 06, 2026
Director: James Cameron, Billie Eilish
Writer: Billie Eilish, Tarik Mikou
Genres: Documentary, Music
Keywords concert film, documentary, comforting, enchant
Production Companies Interscope Films, Darkroom Records, Lightstorm Earth
Box Office Revenue: $20,837,364
Budget: $65,000,000
Updates Updated: May 22, 2026
Entered: Dec 17, 2025
Trailers

Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Billie Eilish Self - Vocals, Piano, Guitar
FINNEAS Self - Vocals, Piano, Guitar
Andrew Marshall Self - Drums
Solomon Smith Self - Bass
Abraham Nouri Self - Keys, Guitar
Tom Crouch Self - Keys, Guitar
Jane Horner Self - Background Vocals
Ava Horner Self - Background Vocals
James Cameron Self (uncredited)
Maggie Baird Self (uncredited)
Charli xcx Self (archive footage; uncredited)
Name Job
James Cameron Director, Editor
Billie Eilish Writer, Songs, Director
Ben Wainwright-Pearce Editor
John Brooks Director of Photography
Tarik Mikou Writer
Name Title
James Cameron Producer
Billie Eilish Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 0 0
2025 9 0 0 0
2025 10 0 0 0
2025 11 0 0 0
2025 12 2 7 0
2026 1 0 1 0
2026 2 0 1 0
2026 3 1 2 0
2026 5 10 10 9

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2026 5 223 375
Year Month High Avg
2026 3 373 655
Year Month High Avg
2026 2 345 560
Year Month High Avg
2026 1 396 605

Return to Top

Reviews

Geronimo1967
6.0

At the risk of swimming against the tide, here - is this really a film at all? Certainly it's an exceptionally high-spec production of a concert from Billie Eilish, and it clearly demonstrates that she is charismatic, engaging and talented - but we have seen so many films of concerts that perhaps ar ... en't in 3D, but that do, and have done, exactly the same as this for decades. Britain's largest indoor venue is packed to the rafters with adoring - even adulatory - fans from a myriad of backgrounds, sexualities, races, creeds and many of them believe that Eilish is their best friend; their inspiration for getting through the day and their equivalent of a deity. She, when we see her backstage, comes across as someone acutely aware of the role she plays in the lives of those who know every lyric to every song she has ever written (and she knows exactly how to make sure they are given every opportunity to join in and share in the experience), and in that she presents a modest and appreciative woman who is as far removed from a diva as it's possible to get. She is an engagingly down-to-earth lady whose humanity and sensitivity is writ large and naturally throughout. James Cameron and his array of technical gizmos, as well as some impressive and colourful set design, give this whole show a polished sheen to it and, of course, the songs are delivered with an acoustic excellence that belies the fact that she is but a tiny dot amidst an enormous cacophony of noise and an ocean of mobile phone torches. Maybe it's just my age, and/or my cynicsm, but I did find the contributions of some of her fans to be a bit cringe making, but perhaps that has been the way ever since Elvis or the Beatles or Whitney Houston took to a stage and changed lives for those enthralled in the crowd. This is a classy and stylish enterprise and if you are a fan of her music then you'll love it. For me, though, I felt just a bit too detached by the sheer professionalism of the whole thing and at times it came across as just a little sterile.

May 10, 2026