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This is a selection of feature films directed by women directors. 1890s–1940s. 1896 La fée aux choux; director: Alice Guy-Blaché; one of the first narrative (fiction) films; 1911 Bufera d'anime; director: Elvira Notari; 1912 Algie the Miner; director: Alice Guy-Blaché(uncredited) first western directed by a woman.
The first section begins by looking at silent films and their use of Mexican men as the bad guys and Mexican women as bad girls with loose morals. In the sections that follow stereotypes such as the greaser, the Latin lover, the tonto (dumb), the bandido (bandit), the lazy Mexican, and the gangster are identified in various Hollywood films.
Budget. $3 million [1] Box office. $7.7 million [2] Real Women Have Curves is a 2002 American comedy-drama film directed by Patricia Cardoso, based on the play of the same name by Josefina López, who co-authored the screenplay for the film with George LaVoo. The film stars America Ferrera (in her feature film debut) as protagonist Ana García.
Arguably the best movie that Goldberg ever made, The Color Purple centers on a Black Southern woman named Celie (Goldberg), who overcomes years of trauma to become an empowered woman who knows her ...
Annette Bening is hopeful about the changing tides for women in Hollywood. The five-time Oscar nominee, 65, was at Harvard University on Tuesday to receive the 2024 Woman of the Year award from ...
Women In the Director's Chair (WIDC) Women Make Movies; The Alice Initiative; Film Fatales; FemaleDirectors.com (films on Netflix and Amazon) The Director List: Women Directors at Work at Cinefemme; Filmmakers at South Asian Women's NETwork (SAWNET) (archive) Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San Diego State University
Starring Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer and Janelle Monae, this movie memorializes the three Black women at NASA who were instrumental in launching astronaut John Glenn into orbit, changing the ...
In 1931–32, RKO Pathé operated as a semiautonomous division of RKO Pictures. In the 1930s and 1940s, Hollywood's Golden Age, RKO was one of the Big Five studios. Its lineup of acting talent during this period included Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, and Robert Mitchum.