Daft Punk are taking their helmets off, well¡­ not really, but they will allow fans to get an inside look into their life and work when they become the subject of a TV documentary in 2015.

The film was recently announced at non-fiction conference Sunny-Side, and will be produced by BBC Worldwide Productions France in conjunction with French subscription channel Canal Plus.

Head of BBC Worldwide Productions France, Jean-Louis Blot, is producing the documentary with Patrice Gell¨¦ and said: ¡°We are proud to announce our first commission with Canal Plus Group on such an original and creative film. BBC Worldwide France stands as a major French producer of documentaries with stunning production values and universal appeal.¡±

Written and directed by Herv¨¦ Martin Delpierre and co-written by Marina Rozenman, the hour-long documentary will track the famously elusive electric duo¡¯s rise from obscurity to fame (musical obscurity, that is, no one really knows what they look like).

During their 20-year music career, Daft Punk ¨C comprised of Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo ¨C have cemented themselves as one of the most successful electronic music collaborations of all time. Having sold over 12 million albums worldwide, and with six Grammy Awards sitting on their shelf, the pair met in 1987 on the grounds of Lyc¨¦e Carnot, a secondary school in Paris.

After a hiatus, the French pioneers made their comeback last year with the release of their fourth album, Random Access Memories, with single ¡®Get Lucky¡¯ topping the ARIA charts here in Australia ¨C marking Daft Punk as the first ever French group to ever accomplish such a feat. The single, which features vocals from Pharrell Williams, sold more than 9.3 million copies globally, making it one of 2013¡¯s biggest singles.

So keep your eyes peeled, because the helmet-clad duo are slated to hit the small screen in 2015.