Austin Butler is set to play Lance Armstrong in a feature film that packages Edward Berger to direct and Zach Baylin to write. Scott Stuber is producing alongside Nick Nesbit, and the project has triggered active interest across multiple studios, according to reporting published Friday. The film is being built around newly secured life rights from Armstrong, a step that signals deeper access than prior dramatizations of his career.
The producers’ deal does not give Armstrong a producer credit, and the reporting frames his participation as limited to rights cooperation rather than creative control. Baylin, Josh Glick, and Zac Frognowski are listed as executive producers. The movie’s internal pitch leans into propulsion and excess—a rise-to-fame story designed to move fast, then collide with consequence once the mythology starts to crack.
Any Armstrong film carries hard history. U.S. Anti-Doping Agency moved in 2012 to sanction him after he chose not to contest its case, and the agency later released a detailed “reasoned decision” that described a coordinated doping scheme tied to the U.S. Postal Service team. The ban was later ratified by cycling’s governing body, Union Cycliste Internationale, stripping Armstrong’s Tour results.
Armstrong later admitted in a televised interview with Oprah Winfrey that he used performance-enhancing methods during his seven Tour de France wins, a confession that shifted the public debate from allegation to accountability. The new film arrives in a different moment for sports biopics, where access deals can raise questions about whose version of events lands on screen and what gets softened for narrative lift.















































