Here’s a declarative statement that’s irrefutable: we need more female directors in Hollywood.
Just consider this: in the nearly hundred year history of the Oscars, female directors have received a paltry ten Best Director nominations– with the first, for Lina Wertmuller, occurring as recently as 1976.
Kathryn Bigelow finally achieved the first landmark win for women in 2010, snagging Best Director for “The Hurt Locker”, followed by wins for Chloe Zhao in 2020 (for “Nomadland”) and 2022 for Aussie veteran Jane Campion (“The Power of the Dog”).
It still feels like too little, too late, though it’s gratifying to see Coralie Farget on the nominees list this year for “The Substance”, even if her film is fatally overrated.
For any living fossils out there still wondering if female director can really cut it, I have a few titles for them (and you) to watch.
Cleo From 5 to 7 (1961), directed by Agnes Varda
This evocative French New Wave piece follows a pop singer around Paris as she awaits the results of tests that may confirm a serious illness. The time we spend with her makes us feel very much alive. Click here to stream it now!
Swept Away…By An Unusual Destiny In The Blue Sea Of August (1974), directed by Lina Wertmuller
Giancarlo Giannini is a cabin boy on a yacht owned by spoiled heiress Mariangela Melato. When they end up stuck together on a remote island, with no rescue in sight, the tables turn, and some intense, sexually charged conflict plays out. Click here to stream it now!
Harlan County, USA (1977), directed by Barbara Kopple
Brilliant documentary captures one of the seminal confrontations in labor history, as Kentucky coal miners fight for improved working conditions from their employer, The Eastover Mining Company. Click here to stream it now!
Fast Times At Ridgemont High (1982), directed by Amy Heckerling
Buoyant teen comedy/romance centers on various student shenanigans at a California high school. A young Sean Penn steals the picture as an unapologetic stoner. Click here to stream it now!
Big (1988) directed by Penny Marshall
At a carnival, a young boy makes a wish to be all grown up, and the next morning, he wakes up as Tom Hanks. You may think the premise sounds silly, but the film really works. It’s both funny and touching. Click here to stream it now!
Salaam Bombay (1988), directed by Mira Nair
A young Indian boy gets kicked out of his home, and must somehow survive on the streets of Bombay. His heart-rending odyssey features some colorful characters he befriends, but, like him, they are stuck in a circle of poverty, and cannot alter the uncertain future he faces. Click here to stream it now!
Orlando (1992), directed by Sally Potter
Based on Virginia Woolf’s book, Tilda Swinton plays the title character, who is given immortality and goes on to experience a series of exciting lives while alternating sexes. Only an actor as talented as Swinton could pull off this gender-bending role so convincingly. Click here to stream it now!
The Piano (1993), directed by Jane Campion
Holly Hunter plays a mute widow and mail order bride who travels with her daughter to remote New Zealand to marry a farmer (Sam Neill). Once there, she starts giving piano lessons to Harvey Keitel, who lives nearby; soon the teacher-pupil relationship erupts into a passionate affair. Click here to stream it now!
Boys Don’t Cry (1999), directed by Kimberly Peirce
Based on a true story, Hilary Swank plays Nebraskan Brandon Teena, who was born a woman but began to live as a man. When some of the locals discover her secret, things get really ugly. Click here to stream it now!
Lost In Translation (2003), directed by Sofia Coppola
Bill Murray is a jaded actor who travels to Tokyo to shoot a whiskey ad. He happens to meet twenty-something Scarlett Johansson, who’s also emotionally adrift, and these two lost souls develop an unlikely bond. Click here to stream it now!
Water (2006) directed by Deepa Mehta
In accordance with tradition, a child bride turned widow is sent to live in an ashram from which she’s unlikely to emerge. There she meets two older women who become her friends and inject an element of warmth and joy into her otherwise ascetic life. Click here to stream it now!
Winter’s Bone (2010), directed by Debra Granik
Jennifer Lawrence plays an adolescent girl forced to care for her family, living in poverty in the Ozarks after their drug dealing father leaves. When the authorities inform her their house will be repossessed if her dad misses his next court date, she must go out and find him at any cost. Click here to stream it now!
Lady Bird (2010), directed by Debra Granik
Saorise Ronan plays a quirky, rebellious teen stuck in a Catholic school with big plans for the future. Laurie Metcalf is her frustrated mother, with issues of her own, who tries to bring her back down to earth. Tangy coming-of-age tale drew Oscar nods for Ronan, Metcalf, and Gerwig. Click here to stream it now!
Never Rarely Sometimes Always (2020), directed by Eliza Hittman
Shot in a documentary style that suits the story, this film portrays, up close and personal, the unnerving experience of Autumn (Sidney Flanigan), a seventeen-year-old Pennsylvania native forced to sneak up to New York City for an abortion with her loyal cousin Skylar (Talia Ryder). Click here to stream it now!