Prime Video announced Friday that “Novak Djokovic: The Wolf in Winter,” a feature-length documentary about the 24-time Grand Slam champion directed by Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Jason Hehir, will premiere on August 20 — landing six weeks after Wimbledon gets underway and arriving while Djokovic, now 39, continues competing at the sport’s highest level.
The film will stream exclusively on Prime Video in more than 240 countries and territories. It comes from Connor Schell’s Words + Pictures and Sadoux Productions, the same team behind acclaimed sports documentaries for streaming platforms.
Hehir, who won an Emmy for directing “The Last Dance,” the landmark Michael Jordan docuseries, brings a comparable all-access approach to the Djokovic project, following the player behind the scenes at major tournaments, through training, and into quieter moments at home with his family.
The documentary features interviews with Djokovic and his wife Jelena, along with tennis luminaries including Rafael Nadal, Andre Agassi, Pete Sampras, Boris Becker, and Jim Courier, as well as journalists and broadcasters who have covered the sport throughout Djokovic’s career.
Hehir described his subject with characteristic frankness. “Novak gave us unfettered access to his tireless physical and mental preparation as he competes at the highest level of the sport, battling men sometimes half his age,” he said. “In the process, we got to know him as a father, a husband, a friend, and a sometimes maddeningly stubborn polarizing cultural figure.”
The film traces Djokovic’s origins in war-torn Serbia, where his family sacrificed through conflict and financial hardship to support his tennis ambitions, and his early years on tour when he was cast as an unwelcome interloper disrupting the Federer-Nadal rivalry fans had elevated to near-mythic status. Where his predecessors projected measured grace, Djokovic was raw, emotional, and unfiltered — qualities that put him at odds with crowds even as he was surpassing records.
The Djokovic documentary joins a wave of tennis-themed streaming projects. Netflix recently debuted a documentary series on Rafael Nadal, and the Tribeca Festival premiered a film about the rivalry between Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova. Djokovic himself said the film is less about trophies than about what the public never saw. “This documentary is about the moments people didn’t see — the doubts, the sacrifices, and the work of constantly evolving beyond the story so many think they know,” he said.




















































