Jim Dowdall
Senior leaders are routinely asked to deliver in conditions where the cost of a single mistake is measured in lives, money, and reputation, and the standard management toolkit was not built for those conditions. The hard problem is not whether the team is talented. It is whether the system around the team can absorb pressure, surface risk early, and still hit the mark when the cameras start rolling.
Jim Dowdall is a former chair of the British Stunt Register and a stunt coordinator with more than four decades of frontline film experience, who helps senior teams think harder about risk, decision-making, and discipline under pressure.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Jim Dowdall
- He has run safety on productions where a missed call ends a career or a life, and he can describe how those calls are made without the language losing its edge in a corporate room.
- He chaired the British Stunt Register, the body that governs professional stunt work in the UK, which gives him authority on how a regulated, safety-critical industry sets and enforces standards.
- His credit list includes Saving Private Ryan, multiple James Bond films, Indiana Jones, Star Wars, and a decade as stunt coordinator for Top Gear and The Grand Tour, so the case studies are recognisable to a non-specialist audience.
- He combines a Parachute Regiment background, an armourer’s technical training, and a coordinator’s governance role, which gives the talk three angles on the same problem rather than a single career arc.
Biography highlights
- Former chair of the British Stunt Register; long-standing member.
- Stunt coordinator and performer on more than 200 film and television titles, including Saving Private Ryan, Skyfall, Tomorrow Never Dies, Die Another Day, The World Is Not Enough, Octopussy, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Star Wars IV and V, and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.
- Stunt coordinator for Top Gear and The Grand Tour.
- Co-author of “Man on Fire: The Life and Other Accidents of Jim Dowdall, Stuntman” (Graham Scott, 2019), foreword by James May.
- Author of “Brassey’s Military Small Arms of the World” (1973), written during his early career as a film armourer.
- Member of BAFTA; invited to speak at Academy film seminars.
- Former soldier, Parachute Regiment.
Biography
A film set built around an explosion, a fall, or a high-speed crash is one of the most tightly governed working environments in any commercial industry. The standards are written down, the risk is priced, and the chain of command is unambiguous. Jim Dowdall has operated at the centre of that system for more than four decades.
His credits run from Octopussy and The Spy Who Loved Me through Saving Private Ryan, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, the Star Wars original trilogy, and on to Skyfall, Die Another Day, and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. He spent ten years as stunt coordinator for Top Gear and The Grand Tour. He has doubled Harrison Ford, Roger Moore, Pierce Brosnan, and Timothy Dalton.
The institutional weight matters as much as the credit list. Dowdall is a former chair of the British Stunt Register, the body that licenses and governs UK stunt work, and a member of BAFTA. His co-authored memoir “Man on Fire”, with a foreword by James May, sets out how high-consequence sequences are actually planned, briefed, and run, including the unglamorous detail that separates a controlled set-piece from an injury report.
For a leadership audience, the value is not the anecdote. It is the structure underneath it: how a competent team agrees what an acceptable risk looks like, how it walks back from one that has been priced wrongly, and how a coordinator holds discipline when budget, talent, and time pressure all push the other way.
Key speaking topics
- Risk management in high-consequence environments
- Decision-making under pressure
- Team coordination on complex productions
- Safety culture and operational discipline
- Leadership lessons from the film industry
- Performance in safety-critical settings
Ideal for
- Operations, safety, and risk leaders in regulated or safety-critical industries
- Senior leadership teams looking at how their organisation handles high-stakes decisions
- Project, programme, and transformation leads running complex, time-pressured delivery
- Conferences and offsites where a credible outside-in voice on risk is wanted
Audience outcomes
- A clearer picture of how a regulated, safety-critical industry sets and enforces standards in practice.
- A working model for how senior coordinators price risk, brief teams, and make stop-or-go calls under pressure.
- Recognisable case studies from films and television that translate cleanly into board-level questions about risk and accountability.
- Sharper instinct for the warning signs that precede a serious incident, drawn from a 40-year operational record.
Videos
Fees
| EUR | GBP | USD | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home Country | Under €12000 | Under £10,000 | Under $15000 |
| Asia Pacific | Under €12000 | Under £10,000 | Under $15000 |
| Europe | Under €12000 | Under £10,000 | Under $15000 |
| Middle East & Africa | Under €12000 | Under £10,000 | Under $15000 |
| South America | Under €12000 | Under £10,000 | Under $15000 |
| United Kingdom | Under €12000 | Under £10,000 | Under $15000 |
| US East Coast | Under €12000 | Under £10,000 | Under $15000 |
| US West Coast | Under €12000 | Under £10,000 | Under $15000 |
| Virtual | Under €12000 | Under £10,000 | Under $15000 |