As we limp into the third year of the pandemic, placating platitudes like ânothing is ever set in stoneâ continue to be the order of the day, as does tremendous flexibility when it comes to something relatively minor like, oh, when your next favorite movie is coming out (and, related, how itâs coming out). Despite the unpredictability of 2020 and 2021, female filmmakers continue to make great strides, from winning the top awards at the majority of last yearâs biggest festivals (including Sundance for Sian Heder and Blerta Basholli, Cannes for Julia Ducournau, and Venice for Audrey Diwan), notching only the second woman to win the Best Director Oscar (ChloĂ© Zhao for âNomadlandâ), and churning out big-time box office hits (like âBirds of Prey,â âLittle Women,â âBlack Widow,â and âEternalsâ).
While itâs still unclear if 2022 will provide a bounceback for the box office and its rising (and established) women talents, there are some positive indicators. According to the latest study from the Celluloid Ceiling, the longest-running and most comprehensive study of womenâs employment in film, women directors were up overall in 2020 (because of the pandemic, the study did not track new numbers for 2021). Women directors achieved historic highs in 2020, with women comprising 18 percent of the filmmakers calling the shots behind the top 250 domestic features, an uptick from 13 percent in 2019 and eight percent in 2018.
Getting the chance to helm a studio feature is, of course, not the golden ticket for any director, but itâs hard to deny the power and prestige of directing a big-time movie released by a major studio. For now, studios are still the home of the big blockbusters, the major moneymakers, and the kind of opportunities that continue to elude the vast majority of female filmmakers working in the contemporary era. And while conversations about the need for inclusion and diversity both in front of and behind the camera have been significantly ramped up in recent years, there are still many more changes and evolutions that need to take root in Tinseltown.
Nia DaCosta and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II on the set of âCandymanâ
Screenshot/YouTube
While itâs understandable that the next two years at the box office still seem a little hazy, this early look at whatâs to come from female directors is promising in many ways. For one thing, all of the major studios have at least two female-directed features coming, which has not always been the case in previous years. Even better, these features show off real range, from tentpole superhero films to animated outings, adaptations of beloved novels, plus genre-specific titles in both the horror and rom-com worlds.
As ever, there is plenty of room for growth on this list, especially as the 2022 festival season keeps rolling on, offering potentially hungry studios to purchase new films that have already been made. Elsewhere, there may even be a few surprises lurking in plain sight, as Disney (plus Fox) has a robust slate of currently unknown upcoming features stretching into the coming years, including âeventâ films, animated offerings, and, of course, more superhero movies.
Check out the list of upcoming female-directed features below, divided up by studio. The films listed all have a set release date (or have at least been announced as officially coming out in 2021 or 2022). As with our previous lists from 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, and 2017, we will update as new films are added to (and sometimes removed from) various slates. As of this writing, there are 30 films directed or co-directed by women in the studio offing. Unless otherwise specified, release dates pertain to traditional theatrical distribution. This article was first published on December 30, 2021 and was last updated on May 2, 2022.
Paramount Pictures
âLuck,â directed by Peggy Holmes, August 5, 2022 (Apple TV+ only)
âSpellbound,â directed by Vicky Jenson, November 11, 2022 (Apple TV+ only)
Sony Pictures Entertainment and Sony Pictures Classics
âHotel Transylvania: Transformania,â co-directed by Jennifer Kluska, January 14, 2022 (Amazon Prime Video only)
âWho We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America,â directed by Emily Kunstler and Sarah Kunstler, January 14, 2022
âUmma,â directed by Iris K. Skim, March 18, 2022
âMothering Sunday,â directed by Eva Husson, March 25, 2022
âFather Stu,â directed by Rosalind Ross, April 13, 2022
âWhere the Crawdads Sing,â directed by Olivia Newman, July 22, 2022
âThe Bride,â directed by Jessica M. Thompson, August 26, 2022
âThe Woman King,â directed by Gina Prince-Bythewood, September 16, 2022
âI Wanna Dance with Somebody,â directed by Kasi Lemmons, December 21, 2022
âHallelujah: Leonard Cohen, A Dream, A Song,â co-directed by Dayna Goldfine, TBD 2022
âMothering Sundayâ
Sony Pictures Classics
Twentieth Century Studios and Searchlight Pictures
âFresh,â directed by Mimi Cave, March 4, 2022 (Hulu only)
âCheaper by the Dozen,â directed by Gail Lerner, March 2022 (Disney+ only)
âGood Luck to You, Leo Grande,â directed by Sophie Hyde, June 17, 2022 (Hulu only)
âNot Okay,â directed by Quinn Shephard, July 29, 2022 (Hulu only)
âRosaline,â directed by Karen Maine, TBD 2022 (Hulu only)
âFlaminâ Hot,â directed by Eva Longoria, TBD 2022
Universal Pictures and Focus Features
âMarry Me,â directed by Kat Coiro, February 11, 2022
âHonk for Jesus, Save Your Soul,â directed by Adamma Ebo, September 2, 2022 (also streaming on Peacock)
âShe Said,â directed by Maria Schrader, November 18, 2022
âCocaine Bear,â directed by Elizabeth Banks, February 24, 2023
Walt Disney Pictures/Buena Vista
âTurning Red,â directed by Domee She, March 11, 2022 (Disney+ only)
âHollywood Stargirl,â directed by Julia Hart, June 3, 2022 (Disney+ only)
âHocus Pocus 2,â directed by Anne Fletcher, TBD 2022 (Disney+ only)
âThe Marvels,â directed by Nia DaCosta, July 28, 2023
âThe Falloutâ
Universal Pictures
Warner Bros.
âThe Fallout,â directed by Megan Park, January 27, 2023 (HBO Max only)
âDonât Worry Darling,â directed by Olivia Wilde, September 23, 2022
âEmily,â directed by Frances OâConnor, TBD 2022
âBarbie,â directed by Greta Gerwig, TBD 2023
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