Buckle up, Two and a Half Men fans. Netflix just unleashed aka Charlie Sheen, a two-part doc that peels back the layers of Hollywood’s most famously unraveled star.
In a jaw-dropping moment, Sheen admits that even drug cartels couldn’t keep pace with his consumption, suspecting he was dealing without their permission. Talk about unfiltered chaos.

The doc doubles as a surreal scrapbook: grainy home videos, family footage, and wild anecdotes, tracing Sheen’s swift descent from Platoon heartthrob to “beyond repair” sitcom star. The Independent notes it’s messy, shameless—and impossible to look away from.
Sheen gets real about addiction, rehab flights arranged by CBS, and being tossed from Two and a Half Men. In one chilling line: “It stopped working… There was no higher high left.” This isn’t just storytelling—it’s a self-editing meltdown with a swagger.
Critics are split: some say it’s rehab turned blockbuster, while others argue it’s selective storytelling—a curated rock bottom with press-ready pauses. Sheen admits, “It’s been liberating…. Just to talk about stuff.”
Yes. Yes, you should. Gritty truths, scandalous visuals, and a front-row seat to a life spiraling out of control—aka Charlie Sheen is gripping, cringey, and undeniably watchable. It’s the kind of doc that makes you cringe, gasp, and whisper, “He really did that?!”