Oscar History
Film Bitch History
Welcome

The Film Experience™ was created by Nathaniel R. All material herein is written by our team. (This site is not for profit but for an expression of love for cinema & adjacent artforms.)

Follow TFE on Substackd

Powered by Squarespace
COMMENTS
Keep TFE Strong

We're looking for 500... no 390 SubscribersIf you read us daily, please be one.  

I ♥ The Film Experience

THANKS IN ADVANCE

What'cha Looking For?
Subscribe
« TIFF '24: "By the Stream" could be a good introduction to the cinema of Hong Sang-soo | Main | TIFF '24: Wang Bing completes the "Youth" Trilogy »
Friday
Sep202024

The Hunt for the Tenth: Women in Best Director of 2024

By Juan Carlos Ojano

After last Oscars’ historic record of three female-directed films in Best Picture, we are again headed towards another round of awards season, albeit with no clear frontrunners yet as of the time of writing. Since 2017’s #MeToo, mainstream media outlets have been more cognizant of the routine exclusion of women in the Best Director conversation. Many cinephiles have also been vocal in addressing this issue, more than ever.

The issues female directors face is deeper and more systemic than just the awards season. However, this process of instant canonization is symptomatic of which kinds of art and artists are given more value by the critics and the industry. The fact we only had our ninth female nominee for Best Director at the last Oscars - in the Academy’s 96 years of existence - speaks loudly to this problem...

This year, are we going to have our tenth female nominee in Best Director? Here are this year’s possible contenders:

TOP FIVE


Coralie Fargeat - THE SUBSTANCE (MUBI, Sep 20)

Cannes: Best Screenplay
TIFF: People's Choice Award - Midnight Madness

One of the buzziest titles out of Cannes, this body horror/satire about the beauty standards imposed by society on women continues to get raves from critics and audiences alike as well as mid-screening walkouts. Lead star Demi Moore is also getting Oscar buzz for Best Actress. While the genre is far from what Oscars typically goes for, a changing Academy membership might be more receptive to this film. The passion this film is getting is the kind that will push Fargeat in Director, maybe even Picture too. (Metacritic: 85 / Rotten Tomatoes: 88%)

 

Halina Reijn - BABYGIRL (A24, Dec 25)

Venice Film Festival: Volpi Cup for Best Actress

Oscar winner Nicole Kidman headlines this film and even bags the Best Actress award from Venice. Following her indie hit Bodies Bodies Bodies, Reijn even gets her own buzz for her take on sex and power dynamics. While erotic thriller is another genre that the Academy is typically averse to, the response this film got is promising. A24 is already an established entity to Academy voters and though the distributor has a full plate this season, a December release suggests confidence from the distributor. (Metacritic: 82 / Rotten Tomatoes: 93%)

 


Marielle Heller - NIGHTBITCH (Searchlight, Dec 6)

TIFF: Tribute - Performer Award (for Amy Adams)

Marielle Heller continues her directorial streak with this highly buzzed adaptation of a famous novel. The result is ultimately well-received, with particular praise for Adams’ “go-for-broke” lead performance and Heller’s direction, noted for its big swings and tonal shifts. Don’t be deceived by its lower-than-usual numbers in MC and RT; Adams is very much in play in Best Actress (three of the last four Best Actress winners were from Searchlight). If she is going on a victory lap, she might just take the film with her. (Metacritic: 62 / Rotten Tomatoes: 64%)

 

Rachel Morrison - THE FIRE INSIDE (Amazon MGM, Dec 25)

TIFF: Special Presentations (Official Selection)

Morrison makes the leap to the director’s seat after becoming the first woman to be nominated for Best Cinematography at the Oscars. Unlike the previous contenders, this biopic is very much in the Academy’s wheelhouse. Centering on the life of Olympian Claressa “T-Rex” Shields, this film is written by Oscar winner Barry Jenkins (Moonlight). Even if its distributor already has another big contender in its hands with Nickel Boys, a Christmas release denotes confidence in this crowdpleaser’s awards prospects. (Metacritic: 78 / Rotten Tomatoes: 95%)

 


Payal Kapadia - ALL WE IMAGINE AS LIGHT (Janus/Sideshow, Nov 15)

Cannes: Grand Prix

The most acclaimed title of the five, this probably also has the biggest hurdle to overcome with its nominations. After becoming the first Indian film to compete in Cannes’ main competition since 1994, it went on to win the Grand Prix and continues to be a favorite in the film festival circuit. However, political reasons might stop this from becoming India’s submission for International Feature Film. But with glowing reviews and a strong rooting factor, it might just make it against all odds (remember how Anatomy of a Fall made it in Picture and Director last year despite not being selected as its country’s submission). (Metacritic: 93 / Rotten Tomatoes: 100%)

 

OTHER POSSIBILITIES

Nora Fingscheidt - THE OUTRUN (SPC, Oct 4)

Four-time Oscar nominee Saoirse Ronan is one of the big contenders for Best Actress for this Sundance release. A robust campaign from its distributor may push this film in other categories as well.

 


Andrea Arnold - BIRD (MUBI, Nov 8)

This indie darling is back in Cannes and has been touring film festivals for this coming-of-age drama starring Barry Keoghan (The Banshees of Inisherin) and Franz Rogowski (Passages).

 

Maura Delpero - VERMIGLIO (Sideshow, TBA)

Winner of the Grand Jury Prize at the Venice Film Festival, this title is one of the frontrunners for Italy’s official submission for International Feature Film. Same distributor as All We Imagine as Light.

 

Angelina Jolie - WITHOUT BLOOD (TBA, TBA)

Oscar winner Jolie is also a Best Actress contender for her work in Pablo Larraín’s Maria. Her sixth directorial effort stars Oscar nominees Salma Hayek (Frida) and Demián Bichir (A Better Life).

 

Rungano Nyoni - ON BECOMING A GUINEA FOWL (A24, Dec 13)

From the director of the highly acclaimed I Am Not A Witch (UK’s Oscar entry in 2018), this film won the Best Director at this year’s Un Certain Regard section at Cannes. Also distributed by A24.

 

THE REST OF THE FIELD (WELL, SOME OF THEM)

Déa Kulumbegashvili - April (TBA, TBA)
Mati Diop - Dahomey (MUBI, Oct 25)
Embeth Davidtz - Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight (TBA, TBA)
Erica Tremblay - Fancy Dance (Apple, Jun 21)
Agnieszka Holland - Green Border (Kino Lorber, Jun 21)

Athina Rachel Tsangari - Harvest (TBA, TBA)
Molly Manning Walker - How to Have Sex (MUBI, Feb 2)
Jane Schoenbrun - I Saw the TV Glow (A24, May 3)
Maite Alberdi - In Her Place (Netflix, Oct 11)
Annie Baker - Janet Planet (A24, Jun 21)


Gia Coppola - The Last Showgirl (TBA, TBA)
Rose Glass - Love Lies Bleeding (A24, Mar 8)
Sydney Freeland - Rez Ball (Netflix, Sep 27)
Sandhya Suri - Santosh (Metrograph, TBA)
Minhal Baig - We Grown Now (SPC, Apr 19)

 

Do you predict any of these women to make it into this year’s Best Director lineup at the Oscars? Or do you expect Natalie Portman to present Best Director by saying:

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (9)

I am disappointed with TFE.

In discussion of three of five top film projects directed by women, prominent mention is made of three white actresses playing leads (Demi Moore, Nicole Kidman and Amy Adams). The names of the actresses of color (Kani Kusruti and Ryan Destiny) who play leads in the two remaining films are omitted.

Do better.

September 20, 2024 | Registered CommenterFinbar McBride

Hopefully no woman is nominated this year as true cinephiles don't want nominations given out of pity. Best movies of the year ("The Brutalist", "Anora", "Dune 2", "Emilia Perez", "Conclave") were directed by men so only men should be nominated this year.

September 20, 2024 | Registered CommenterSomeone

Davus -- I consider myself a true cinephile and none of those films even crack my top ten. Glad you're a fan of them, but don't presume your affection represents an absolute truth. All opinions are valid when assessing art and there are no right or wrong ones.

In my opinion, for example, Payal Kapadia runs circles around all those men whose movies you mention.

September 20, 2024 | Registered CommenterCláudio Alves

If a director male or female is deserving they should be considered.

I am hoping but not expecting Demi to make it,I think the 5 will be Kidman,Jolie,Swinton,Gascon and Madison.

Is Babygirl really an erotic thriller or an erotic drama,are there any thrills in it apart from Nicole,I am intrigued but i'm expecting a Sliver and think i'm going to get an Unfaithful.

September 20, 2024 | Registered CommenterMr Ripley79

Claudio Alves - whatever. If someone thinks that woman directed the best movie of the year, he or she should vote for her. But no one should vote for a woman only because 9 women were nominated so far - that's totally irrelevant as Oscars are for quality, not for diversity or making history. Every time I read such bulshit articles, I feel irritated (as everybody should be).

September 20, 2024 | Registered CommenterSomeone

Juan Carlos, thanks for laying out this year's possiblities...fun to read all them. Seems like this year might be a female-less list, which is sometimes how it will turn out.

I agree that it should always be quality first, and we can only ever vote for our own personal view of quality. For me, personally, one of the reasons Chloe Zhao and Jane Campion's wins were so thrilling was because they both deserved it. It didn't feel like the award was given for any other reason other than people respecting their artistry.

September 20, 2024 | Registered CommenterEricB

Is this finally the year where Agnieszka Holland’s “Green Border” is eligible?
Holland has been such a master filmmaker for decades, such technical skill allied with daring and uncompromising choice of material. And yet! In the humanistic tradition!

Always, always, worth a watch.

September 21, 2024 | Registered CommenterMcGill

I appreciate an article like this cause there some pretty incredible films listed here and while the likelihood looks low we as film enthusiasts should still talk about these films if we love them.

It has been a fruitful time for brilliant female directed films in the last decade where honestly i'd have nominated 3+ female in best director in each of the past four years. I am not fully sure what my personal list will look like this year but having seen both Coralie Fargeat and Payal Kapadia's films at Cannes both are among my favourite of the year and it would be shocking if both didn't make my personal list.

While both seem unlikely for directing nods I will try push both for nominations in Makeup and International Film respectfully so both film are historically referred to as academy award nominated films.

September 22, 2024 | Registered CommenterEoin Daly

I would love to see The Substance get nominated for Picture, Director, Actress (Moore), and Supporting Actress for Qualley. I consider Qualley a co-lead with Moore but I will overlook it in her case because I thought she was spectacular.

September 29, 2024 | Registered CommenterMichael R
Member Account Required
You must have a member account to comment. It's free so register here.. IF YOU ARE ALREADY REGISTERED, JUST LOGIN.