Films About Women Opening This Week
Diary of a Chambermaid — Co-Written by Hélène Zimmer
“Diary of a Chambermaid” is set during the beginning of the 20th century in provincial France. Highly sought after because of her beauty, Célestine (Léa Seydoux) is a young chambermaid who has just arrived from Paris into the service of the Lanlaire family. Rejecting Monsieur’s (Hervé Pierre) overtures, Célestine must also cope with Madame Lanlaire (Clotilde Mollet), a strict and severe woman who rules the household with an iron fist. She makes the acquaintance of Joseph (Vincent Lindon), the Lanlaire’s mysterious gardener, and becomes fascinated by him. (Press materials)
Call Her Applebroog (Documentary) — Directed by Beth B (Opens in NY)
This deeply personal portrait of acclaimed New York-based artist Ida Applebroog was shot with mischievous reverence by her filmmaker daughter, Beth B. Born in the Bronx to Orthodox Jewish émigrés from Poland, Applebroog, now in her 80s, looks back at how she expressed herself through decades of drawings and paintings, as well as her private journals. With her daughter’s encouragement, she investigates the stranger that is her former self, a woman who found psychological and sexual liberation through art. As Beth B finds a deeper understanding of her mother as a human being, Applebroog shares a newfound appreciation for her own provocative work. (Press materials)
Films About Women Currently Playing
- The Witness (Documentary)
- Honeyglue
- Creedmoria — Written and Directed by Alicia Slimmer
- The Fits — Written and Directed by Anna Rose Holmer
- Me Before You — Directed by Thea Sharrock; Written by Jojo Moyes
- Alice Through the Looking Glass — Written by Linda Woolverton
- Princess — Written and Directed by Tali Shalom Ezer (Also available on VOD)
- Presenting Princess Shaw (Documentary) (Also available on VOD)
- To Life (À La Vie) (Also available on VOD)
- Ma ma
- Maggie’s Plan — Written and Directed by Rebecca Miller
- Sunset Song
- Love & Friendship
- Black Girl (Restored Print)
- Dark Horse (Documentary) — Written and Directed by Louise Osmond
- Mother’s Day — Co-Written by Anya Kochoff and Lily Hollander
- The Huntsman: Winter’s War
- Sworn Virgin — Directed by Laura Bispuri; Written by Laura Bispuri and Francesca Manieri
- Eva Hesse (Documentary) — Written and Directed by Marcie Begleiter
- The Meddler — Written and Directed by Lorene Scafaria
- The Boss — Co-Written by Melissa McCarthy
- God’s Not Dead 2
- April and the Extraordinary World
- Krisha
- The Divergent Series: Allegiant
- Hello, My Name is Doris — Co-Written by Laura Terruso
- 10 Cloverfield Lane
- Eye in the Sky
- Miracles From Heaven — Directed by Patricia Riggen
- Zootopia
Films Directed by Women Opening This Week
Careful What You Wish For — Directed by Elizabeth Allen (Also available on VOD)
A guy (Nick Jonas) gets more than he bargained for after entering into an affair with the wife (Isabel Lucas) of an investment banker (Dermot Mulroney). Soon, a suspicious death and substantial life insurance policy embroil him in a scandal. (IMDb)
Read Women and Hollywood’s interview with Elizabeth Allen.
“Germans & Jews” (Documentary) — Directed by Janina Quint (Opens in NY)
Today, Europe’s fastest growing Jewish population is in Berlin. Germany is considered one of the most democratic societies in the world, assuming the position of moral leader in Europe as it embraces hundreds of thousands of refugees. None of these developments could have been imagined in 1945. Through personal stories “Germans & Jews” explores the country’s transformation from silence about the Holocaust to facing it head on. Unexpectedly, a nuanced story of reconciliation emerges. What began as a private conversation between the two filmmakers and friends, Tal Recanati (Jewish) and Janina Quint (non-Jewish German), grew into a cultural exchange among many. We realize that the two people are inextricably linked through the memory of the Holocaust. “Germans and Jews” is provocative, unexpected, and enlightening. (Press materials)
Films Directed by Women Currently Playing
- Gurukulam (Documentary) — Co-Directed by Jillian Elizabeth
- Chevalier — Co-Written and Directed by Athina Rachel Tsangari
- Weiner (Documentary) — Co-Written and Co-Directed by Elyse Steinberg
- Unlocking the Cage (Documentary) — Co-Directed by Chris Hegedus
- Song of Lahore (Documentary) — Co-Directed by Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy (Also available on DVD, VOD, and Digital HD)
- Money Monster — Directed by Jodie Foster
- Ratchet & Clank — Co-Directed by Jericca Cleland
- A Beautiful Planet (Documentary) — Directed by Toni Myers
- Rio, I Love You — Co-Directed by Nadine Labaki; Co-Written by Nadine Labaki and Elena Soarez
- The Invitation — Directed by Karyn Kusama (Also available on VOD)
- Kung Fu Panda 3 — Co-Directed by Jennifer Yuh
Films Written by Women Opening This Week
None
Films Written by Women Currently Playing
- The President — Co-Written by Marziyeh Meshkiny
- High-Rise — Written by Amy Jump
- Barbershop: The Next Cut — Co-Written by Tracy Oliver
- Meet the Blacks — Co-Written by Nicole DeMasi
- London Has Fallen — Co-Written by Katrin Benedikt
TV Premieres This Week
Love Under New Management: The Miki Howard Story — Directed by Christine Swanson; Written by Christine Swanson and Rhonda F. Baraka (Premieres June 12 on TV One)
Teyonah Parris stars in TV One’s, “Love Under New Management,” the amazing story of R&B singer Miki Howard. Before becoming a Grammy Award-nominated singer, Howard (Parris) was a homeless teenager who was forced to fend for herself to a struggling singer desperate for love, attention, and success to a beloved chart-topping, award-winning R&B princess whose voice was undeniably one of the best in the business. But Miki’s story is not just the story of a girl’s rise to stardom. It’s the story of perseverance in the face of adversity and the will to overcome poor choices, poor relationships, and poor self-esteem. It’s a story that teaches us that self-love is indeed the greatest love of all. (Press materials)
The Night Stalker — Written and Directed by Megan Griffiths (Premieres June 12 on Lifetime)
Known to many as the “Night Stalker,” Richard Ramirez (Lou Diamond Phillips) was an unusually cruel and prolific serial killer who murdered 14 people and terrorized Los Angeles in the summer of 1985. Though Ramirez was convicted of these atrocities and remained on death row for nearly thirty years, he was always suspected of committing additional crimes. This thriller tells the story of Kit (Bellamy Young), an attorney who travels to San Quentin on an impossible mission to clear the name of a death row inmate in Texas — someone she believes has been wrongly accused of murders actually perpetrated by Ramirez. Kit herself lived in Los Angeles during the fear-tinged summer where Ramirez terrified its citizens, and confronting him again dredges up old and frightening memories of her own past. As the days count down to the innocent Texas man’s execution, Kit confronts Ramirez about his unspeakable crimes in search of an elusive confession, plunging into intense psychological depths in her quest for the truth. (Press materials)
VOD/DVD Releasing This Week
45 Years (VOD, June 14)
Hello, My Name is Doris — Co-Written by Laura Terruso (VOD, June 14)
Young Messiah — Co-Written by Betsy Giffen Nowrasteh (DVD, June 14)
Picks of the Week from Women and Hollywood
Listen: Podcast with Emily Best, CEO and Founder of Seed&Spark
Elizabeth Banks and Directing While Mothering
Submissions for Warner Bros. Pictures Emerging Directors Workshop Now Open
On Women and Hollywood This Week
Robin Thede Calls for Support for WGAE’s Diversity Tax Credit
Quote of the Day: “Grace and Frankie” Creator Marta Kauffman Talks Aging on TV
Hettie MacDonald to Direct “Howards End” Miniseries for BBC
Watch: Lena Dunham and “Girls” Cast Record PSA on Sexual Assault
Ingrid Veninger’s “He Hated Pigeons” to Open Female Eye Film Festival
Trailer Watch: Blake Lively Takes On a Great White Shark in “The Shallows”
Elizabeth Allen Talks Femme Fatales and Coming of Age in “Careful What You Wish For”
Kerry Washington Will Receive SAG-AFTRA’s Actors Inspiration Award
Geena Davis to Produce Hollywood Gender Inequality Doc, But a Man Will Direct
“Homeland” Season 6 Will Have a Female President
“O.J.: Made In America” Producer Caroline Waterlow on Race, Marcia Clark, and Domestic Abuse
Laura Linney and Cynthia Nixon to Alternate Roles on Stage in “The Little Foxes”
“From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series” Announces Season 3 Directors with Only One Woman for 10 Episodes
Trailer Watch: Teen Girls Battle Bratwurst Nazis in “Yoga Hosers”
Sloane Crosley’s Debut Novel Optioned By Universal
“Tomorrowland’s” Britt Robertson to Star in Netflix’s “Girlboss”
LA Film Fest 2016 Women Directors: Meet Anaïs Volpé — “HEIS (Chronicles)”
Sexist Comment of the Day: Studio Ghibli Producer Explains Why They Don’t Hire Women to Direct
Kathryn Bigelow and Amy Sherman-Palladino Both Have Pilots in the Works
Trailer Watch: “Jesus Camp” Directors Tackle TV Icon in “Norman Lear: Just Another Version of You”
How Finding a Filmmaking Partner Changed My Career
Netflix Snags Cannes Hit “The Divines”
Trailer Watch: Atheist Doctor Teams Up with Nuns in Anne Fontaine’s “The Innocents”
Zoe Saldana to Produce Documentary About Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women
Pearlena Igbokwe to Head Universal Television
Ava DuVernay Honored at LAFF, Promotes Diversity in Film
Amy Poehler and Natasha Lyonne Bringing “Zero Motivation” to TV
“First Wives Club” Coming to TV, Alyson Hannigan and Megan Hilty Will Star
“Me Before You” Defies Expectations at Box Office Proving the Power of Female Audiences
Trailer Watch: “When the Bough Breaks” Doc Captures Postpartum Depression
Diane Lane Commits $20,000 for Female Music Educators Grant, Applications Open
Queen Latifah and Jada Pinkett Smith Team Up for a “Girl Trip”
LA Film Fest 2016 Women Directors: Meet Dorie Barton — “Girl Flu.”
LA Film Fest 2016 Women Directors: Meet Melissa Finell — “Sensitivity Training”
Anna Rose Holmer on Hysteria and Collaboration in Her Genre-Blending Dance Film “The Fits”
Iranian Actress Causes Uproar Over Feminist Tattoo
LA Film Fest 2016 Women Directors: Meet Eve Marson — “Dr. Feelgood”
5 Ways to Stop Being Terrible When Discussing Amber Heard’s Bisexuality
Effie Brown on “Project Greenlight,” Inclusiveness, and Loving Comic Book Films
Weekly Reads from Around the Internet
Disney Heroines Have Changed For The Better, According To Disney Screenwriter Linda Woolverton by Casey Cipriani
28 Asian-American Filmmakers You Need To Know by Alison Willmore
Do Box-Office Boycotts Work? by Katie Kilkenny
Female Cinematographers, Not Content to Hide Behind the Camera by Melena Ryzik
Lifetime’s “UnReal” Recycles a Producer’s Dark Experiences by Rachel Syme