James George Webber

James George Webber

Dogwoof is a London-based documentary film company integrating production, sales, and UK theatrical distribution. Dogwoof has so far released 31 Oscar®-nominated documentaries, with five wins and an additional four BAFTA winners; notable titles include 2023 Oscar®-winning and BAFTA-winning Navalny, Oscar®-winning and BAFTA-winning Free Solo (the UK's highest-grossing documentary of 2018), BAFTA-nominated Apollo 11 (the UK’s highest-grossing doc of 2019), BAFTA-winning The Act of Killing, and Blackfish. Dogwoof is increasingly ramping up its production activities and recent titles it has financed and produced include: Playing with Sharks (Sundance 2021, sold to National Geographic), The Lost Leonardo (Tribeca 2021, sold to Sony Pictures Classics), Citizen Ashe (Telluride 2021, sold to CNN / HBO Max), and McEnroe (Tribeca 2022, sold to Showtime). Dogwoof started 2023 with three Oscar® and three BAFTA-nominations, with all three titles premiering and winning awards in Sundance 2022: Navalny by Daniel Roher which won both the US Documentary Audience Award and the Audience Favourite Award and went on to receive the 2023 Oscar® and BAFTA awards; All That Breathes by Shaunak Sen which took the World Cinema Grand Jury Prize and was part of the Cannes 2022 official selection; and Fire of Love by Sara Dosa, winner of the Jonathan Oppenheim Editing Award. In 2023 Dogwoof distribution has so far released Dreaming Walls by Maya Duverdier and Amelie van Elmbt, executive produced by Martin Scorsese, and Subject by Jennifer Tiexiera and Camilla Hall which premiered in Tribeca 2022. Dogwoof's current films in production include: Lomu on rugby legend Jonah Lomu; Schmeichel about the world's greatest soccer goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel, and Copa 71 by Rachel Ramsay and James Erskine, executive produced by Serena and Venus Williams.
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