The Jelena Dokic documentary you are looking for is called “Unbreakable: The Jelena Dokic Story” , and it is currently available via several platforms depending on your country, plus it had a cinema run in Australia in late 2024–2025.

Where to watch right now

Because rights are regional, where you can stream or buy it depends a lot on where you live, but here are the main confirmed options as of early 2026.

  • Australia
    • Streaming on Stan under the title Unbreakable: The Jelena Dokic Story.
* It was also released in Australian cinemas from **7 November 2024** via Roadshow Films, so some independent cinema sites may still list encore or special screenings.
  • UK (and some European regions)
    • Listed on Flicks UK with “how to watch online, stream, rent or buy” options for the UK, which typically means digital rental/EST via common platforms (e.g. iTunes/Prime Video) once fully rolled out.
  • New Zealand (and select international markets)
    • Appears on Apple TV / iTunes (NZ store) as a documentary movie available to rent or buy, running about 1h 45m.

Because digital rights change often, it’s worth:

  1. Searching your local Apple TV / iTunes, Amazon Prime Video, Google Play/YouTube Movies store for “Unbreakable: The Jelena Dokic Story”.
  2. Checking your region’s major streamers (Stan, Netflix, Prime, Paramount+, Binge, Disney+) by searching the exact title in their apps.
  3. Looking at local cinema chains or boutique cinemas if you are in Australia, as some still host special doco screenings.

What the documentary covers (content note)

This is a serious, heavy-topic documentary : it follows Jelena’s journey from refugee to world No. 4 and details severe domestic and emotional abuse from her father/coach, along with bullying and mental health struggles.

Key themes viewers talk about on news and discussion platforms include:

  • Surviving war and displacement as a child and then trying to succeed in elite sport.
  • The intense, long‑term violence and control exerted by her father Damir Dokic, sometimes described as a “tennis dad from hell”.
  • Her eventual break from him, later advocacy work, and how she frames herself as a survivor and success story rather than just a victim.

If you’re sensitive to depictions or detailed descriptions of family violence, emotional abuse, and suicidal thoughts , this may be emotionally challenging viewing.

Mini forum-style scoop & current buzz

The documentary has been a noticeable talking point in Australian media and online spaces since its release, especially around awards and interviews.

  • Jelena has discussed how hard it was to revisit archived footage and trauma on camera, and mentioned that many companies initially turned down the project because it tackled such tough subjects.
  • She links the film with her mission from her book Unbreakable : if telling her story helps even one person, she considers that “mission accomplished”.
  • Recent interviews and podcasts highlight her Logie win for the documentary and her activism against body shaming and online trolling, which has sparked fresh online conversations about how audiences talk about athletes’ bodies and mental health.

In forum-style discussions and social threads (summarizing trends, not quoting directly), you’ll commonly see:

  • Viewers calling it “hard to watch but essential” and recommending content warnings for abuse.
  • Survivors saying her openness about suicidal ideation and recovery made them feel less alone.
  • Tennis fans re‑evaluating the early‑2000s women’s game with more awareness of what some players were enduring off court.

Quick tips to find it in your region

If you just want a fast way to locate it:

  1. Search this exact title in your country’s main services:
    • “Unbreakable: The Jelena Dokic Story” (include the word Unbreakable and her surname).
  1. Check:
    • A local streamer that carries a lot of Australian content (e.g. Stan in Australia).
 * Your regional **Apple TV / iTunes** store, which already lists it in some territories.
  1. If nothing appears, look up your country’s main art‑house or documentary cinema sites, which may list event screenings or Q&A showings.

If you tell your country/region, a more precise “watch here” list can be narrowed down further (as availability is quite different between, say, Australia, the UK, and North America).

— Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.