Features, Weekly Update

Weekly Update for July 11: Women Centric, Directed and Written Films Playing Near You

Films About Women Opening

Audrey — Co-Written by Sybil Darrow

“Too old, too ugly, too stupid, too fat — 34-year-old single gal Audrey (Sybil Darrow) is none of these, not that you’d be able to convince her otherwise,” I wrote in my LA Weekly review of Audrey. Co-written by Darrow as a star vehicle, the film centers on a woman waiting in real time for her date to show up, with flashbacks that help our protagonist try to figure out everything that’s supposedly wrong with her. Consequently, the film isn’t unlike spending 90 minutes listening to your most insecure friend talk about her problems. At least Audrey has an epiphany that helps her realize she’s been worried about nothing for so long. (Inkoo Kang)

Honour

A young Indian woman with a very traditional family in the UK defies her family by falling in love on her own terms, and it sets off a series of tragic events that sadly happens too often. She angers the family by falling in love with an Indian man of a different religion and the family goes to violent lengths to deal with her and to redeem their name. But the story has a big twist, and for once, there is a hopeful ending. (Melissa Silverstein)

Films About Women Currently Playing

Bound By Flesh (doc) — Directed by Leslie Zemeckis

Redemption Trail — Written and Directed by Britta Sjorgen

Tammy — Co-Written by Melissa McCarthy

Gabrielle — Directed by Louise Archambault
Heatstroke — Directed by Evelyn Purcell

American Revolutionary: The Evolution of Grace Lee Boggs (doc) — Directed by Grace Lee

The Amazing Catfish — Written and Directed by Claudia Saint-Luce

Belle — Directed by Amma Asante; Written by Misan Sagay

Obvious Child — Written and Directed by Gillian Robespierre

The Fault in Our Stars

Maleficent — Written by Linda Woolverton

We Are the Best!

Lucky Them — Directed by Megan Griffiths; Co-Written by Emily Wachtel

The Immigrant

Legends of Oz: Dorothy’s Return — Co-Written by Randi Barnes

Moms’ Night Out — Co-Written by Andrea Gyertson Nasfell

Ida

The Other Woman — Directed by Melissa Stack

Under the Skin

Finding Vivian Maier (doc)

Divergent — Co-Written by Vanessa Taylor

Films Directed by Women Opening

Land Ho! — Co-Written and Co-Directed by Martha Stephens

Land Ho! tells the story of two very different ex-brothers-in-law who travel to Iceland for a holiday. It’s about life and regrets and coming to terms with the fact that you are getting older. It’s got amazing locations in Iceland that will make any traveller itch to get there. It is the first film from Gamechanger Films, the company that will solely finance feature films directed or co-directed by women. (Melissa Silverstein)

Read Women and Hollywood’s interview with Martha Stephens.

Drunktown’s Finest — Written and Directed by Sydney Freeland

Three young Native Americans — an adopted Christian girl, a rebellious father-to-be, and a promiscuous transsexual — strive to escape the hardships of life on an Indian reservation. (IMDB)

Read Women and Hollywood’s interview with Sydney Freeland.

Underwater Dreams — Written and Directed by Mary Mazzio

An epic story of how the sons of undocumented Mexican immigrants learned how to build an underwater robot from Home Depot parts. And defeat engineering powerhouse MIT in the process. (Underwaterdreamsfilm.com)

Films Directed by Women Currently Playing

Nothing Bad Can Happen — Written and Directed by Katrin Gebbe

Beyond the Edge — Written and Directed by Leanne Pooley

Exhibition — Written and Directed by Joanaa Hogg

Hellion — Written and Directed by Kat Chandler

Citizen Koch (doc) — Co-Directed by Tia Lessin

The Only Real Game (doc) — Directed by Mirra Bank

Night Moves — Co-Written and Directed by Kelly Reichardt

Palo Alto — Written and Directed by Gia Coppola

Fed Up (doc) — Co-Written and Directed by Stephanie Soechtig

Exclusive: Noémie Merlant is a New Mom Struggling to Cope in “Baby Ruby” Clip

Noémie Merlant finds herself in another living nightmare in “Baby Ruby.” After escaping the clutches of an egomaniacal boss in ‘Tár,” the French actress plays a new mother...

Sundance 2023 Preview: Judy Blume, the Indigo Girls, and Bethann Hardison Make Their Mark on Park City

The first major fest of 2023 is nearly upon us. With over 100 films representing 23 countries, the 25th edition of Sundance Film Festival features plenty of promising titles from emerging voices as...

Quote of the Day: Michelle Yeoh Says “We Can Tell Our Own Stories on Our Own Terms”

Michelle Yeoh took home an award and made history at last night’s National Board of Review gala. The Oscar favorite received Best Actress honors for “Everything Everywhere All At...

Posts Search

Publishing Dates
Start date
- select start date -
End date
- select end date -
Category
News
Films
Interviews
Features
Trailers
Festivals
Television
RESET