Updated, see below: Numbers donât lie. A recent study found female filmmakers remain âgrossly underrepresentedâ when it comes to directing opportunities, and there is no arena in which that is more apparent than Hollywoodâs own studio system. As The Wrap recently noted, âof the 149 movies currently slated for a wide release from the six legacy studios over the next three years, only 12 have female directors. That means a whopping 92 percent of the major motion pictures due in theaters through the end of 2019 will be helmed by men.â
That number only includes studio features from the big six, not speciality arms like Fox Searchlight, Sony Pictures Classics, or Focus Features. However, adding those more indie-minded distributors (which are often heavy on festival acquisitions) doesnât paint a much rosier picture. Over the course of 2017 and 2018, only 24 films directed by women will hit theaters care of a Hollywood studio, and despite continued attention paid to Hollywoodâs gender inequality issues, the needle doesnât appear to be moving in the right direction.
Disney has zero films directed by women on their 2017 slate, although their 2018 lineup includes Ava DuVernayâs âA Wrinkle in Timeâ adaptation (the first $100 million live-action feature to be directed by a female director of color), along with their live-action âMulanâ from rumored director Niki Caro (who also pops up on this list, thanks to her upcoming Focus Features release, âThe Zookeeperâs Wifeâ), and âGigantic,â an animated offering co-directed by Meg LeFauve.
Similarly, Twentieth Century Fox also has a female filmmaker-free 2017 schedule, with 2018 likely playing home to Emily Carmichaelâs âLumberjanesâ and Ryan Caseâs âFire Me,â both of which have been announced but do not yet have casts or release dates. With the addition of Fox Searchlight and animation titles, the studio comes out slightly ahead. The speciality arm already released Amma Asanteâs âA United Kingdomâ last month, and will soon debut Amanda Lipitzâs Sundance hit âStep.â
Later in the year, âBattle of the Sexes,â co-directed by Valerie Faris, is due to arrive from Searchlight (the film does not yet have a release date, but does have a starring turn by newly minted Best Actress Emma Stone). At some point in the next two years, Searchlight will release Marielle Hellerâs first big post-âDiary of a Teenage Girlâ feature, âCan You Ever Forgive Me?â
âA United Kingdomâ
20th Century Fox
Elsewhere, Warner Bros. will bow three female-directed features this year â including Patty Jenkinsâ blockbuster âWonder Womanâ â but has nothing on track for 2018. Sony is in a similar situation, with a varied slate of 2017 from both the studio proper and their Sony Pictures Classics, with nothing directed by a woman yet set for 2018. (The studio has snagged Michelle MacLaren for âThe Nightingaleâ and Elizabeth Banks for their âCharlieâs Angelsâ reboot, but neither has set a release date yet.) Updated: On May 23, Sony announced release dates for both âThe Nightingaleâ and âCharlieâs Angels,â with MacLarenâs film set for 2018 and Banksâ in 2019. Weâve indicated the change below.
Universal appears to rely strongly on Focus Features to increase female director numbers, as the speciality arm will soon release Caroâs âThe Zookeeperâs Wifeâ and Sofia Coppolaâs much-anticipated âThe Beguiled.â The studio is also attempting some homegrown appeal, thanks to its smash hit âPitch Perfectâ series. The studio will release the third film in the franchise this December (directed by Trish Sie), and the series also helped boost the visibility of screenwriter Kay Cannon, who wrote all three films and will make her directorial debut in 2018 with Universalâs âThe Pact.â (Oddly enough, Cannon does not have writing credit on her debut; it has five credited male screenwriters).
Itâs Paramount Pictures, however, that has the most dismal slate when it comes to female filmmakers. It will release just one film with a female director in the coming months: âAn Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power,â which was co-directed by Bonni Cohen. That film will arrive in theaters this July. Otherwise, the studio has no other female-directed features on its slate for the rest of 2017 or all of 2018.
Check out the list of upcoming female-directed features below, as divided by studio (films that have already been released in 2017 are denoted with an *).
Twentieth Century Fox and Fox Searchlight
âA United Kingdom,â directed by Amma Asante, released on February 10, 2017 (Fox Searchlight)*
âStep,â directed by Amanda Lipitz, to be released July 7, 2017 (Fox Searchlight)
âBattle of the Sexes,â co-directed by Valerie Faris, September 22, 2017 (Fox Searchlight)
âFire Me,â directed by Ryan Case, TBD 2017
âCan You Ever Forgive Me?,â directed by Marielle Heller, TBD 2017/2018 (Fox Searchlight)
âLumberjanes,â directed by Emily Carmichael, TBD 2018
âStepâ
Courtesy of Sundance
Walt Disney Pictures
âA Wrinkle in Time,â directed by Ava DuVernay, to be released April 8, 2018
âMulan,â directed by Niki Caro, to be released November 2, 2018
âGigantic,â co-directed by Meg LeFauve, to be released November 21, 2018 (animated)
Warner Bros.
âUnforgettable,â directed by Denise Di Novi, to be released April 21, 2017
âEverything, Everything,â directed by Stella Meghie, to be released May 19, 2017
âWonder Woman,â directed by Patty Jenkins, to be released June 2, 2017
Paramount Pictures
âAn Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power,â co-directed by Bonni Cohen, to be released July 28, 2017
âThe Zookeeperâs Wifeâ
Universal Studios and Focus Features
âRaw,â directed by Julia Ducournau, released March 10, 2017 (Focus World)*
âThe Zookeeperâs Wife,â directed by Niki Caro, to be released March 31, 2017 (Focus Features)
âThe Beguiled,â directed by Sofia Coppola, to be released June 30, 2017 (Focus Features)
âPitch Perfect 3,â directed by Trish Sie, to be released December 22, 2017
âThe Pact,â directed by Kay Cannon, to be released April 20, 2018
Sony Entertainment and Sony Pictures Classics
âUnderworld: Blood Wars,â directed by Anna Foerster, released on January 6, 2017*
âParis Can Wait,â directed by Eleanor Coppola, to be released May 12, 2017 (Sony Pictures Classics)
âMaudie,â directed by Aisling Walsh, to be released June 16, 2017 (Sony Pictures Classics)
âRough Night,â directed by Lucia Aniello, to be released June 26, 2017
âNovitiate,â directed by Maggie Betts, TBD 2017Â (Sony Pictures Classics)
âThe Nightingale,â directed by Michelle MacLaren, to be released August 10, 2018
Additional research by Kerry Levielle and Allison Piccuro.
Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.
Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.