Charlie Sheen’s Netflix documentary leaves little unsaid — except when it comes to his famous father.
At this week’s Emmy FYC screening of Aka Charlie Sheen in Los Angeles, Sheen and director Andrew Renzi pulled back the curtain on the Netflix film, including why two of the most important figures in his life ultimately chose not to participate on camera. The documentary traces Sheen’s rise, fall, and turbulent path to sobriety, blending candid interviews with never-before-seen archival footage to revisit one of Hollywood’s most public personal journeys.
But one absence looms large: Martin Sheen. According to Sheen, the decision wasn’t about distance or any family feud — it was about perspective.
“Dad saw a cut … he was laughing, he was crying, he was so engaged,” Sheen said. “And then he comes up afterwards and says, ‘I’m already in it. I’d much rather be young, handsome … you don’t need this old guy in your movie.’”
Renzi added that the reasoning went deeper — and spoke to Martin Sheen’s instincts as a father. “If this goes sideways, I need to be able to stand beside my son,” Renzi recalled. “If I’m in this thing, I can’t, because I will have been complicit.” For the filmmaker, that perspective ultimately reframed the absence: “This is one of those moments that he just doesn’t need to participate in to be your dad. And I thought that was kind of beautiful.”

Sheen’s brother Emilio Estevez made a similar call, opting to keep the focus squarely on Charlie. “He felt they were my stories to tell,” Sheen explained.
If some voices held back, others didn’t hesitate — including Sean Penn. For a famously press-averse actor, his involvement might seem unlikely, but Sheen said it came together almost instantly.
“I cold-called him … he was in his truck on Pacific Coast Highway,” Sheen recalled. “I said, ‘Hey, I’m doing this thing and I’d love for you to be a part of it.’ He says, ‘Oh, so it’s like a doc about your life?’ I said, ‘Yeah.’ He’s like, ‘I’m in. Where and when?’”
Renzi revealed he spent nearly a year getting to know Sheen before filming even began. “I knew that both of us had to understand each other before we could shoot a frame of this film,” he said.
When cameras finally rolled, there were no boundaries. “There was nothing off limits at all,” Renzi said, noting that the real challenge wasn’t what to include — but what was even real in the mythology surrounding Sheen. That approach led to marathon interview sessions — sometimes stretching 10 hours a day — and more than 30 hours of footage overall.

For Sheen, the process was both exhausting and liberating — especially as it overlapped with writing his autobiography, The Book of Sheen: A Memoir. “For years, I’d grown so tired of hearing versions of stories that I lived that were inaccurate,” he said. “I was excited that at some point I’d be able to leave this stuff behind and say, ‘You can watch it, you can read it … it’s all there.’”
Now, with the documentary streaming and positioned for Emmy consideration, Sheen sees it less as closure and more as a turning point. As for what his future looks like? “It looks like tonight. It looks like right now,” he said.

