June 6, 2025

She Directed That?! Movies You Didn’t Know Were Directed by Women

Movies directed by women - A collage of eight movie posters, each directed by a female filmmaker, including Kung Fu Panda 2, Woman of the Hour, Eleanor the Great, American Psycho, Booksmart, The Babadook, The Chronology of Water, and You Were Never Really Here.

From billion-dollar blockbusters to indie head trips, you’ve seen these movies – but did you know these are movies directed by women?

 

Women Behind the Camera: Progress and Persistent Gaps

Women are directing more films than ever before, but we’re far from parity—and even farther from recognition.

According to the USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative:

  • In 2023, women directed 12.1% of the top 100 films.
  • In 2024, that number rose to 13.4%.

While these numbers show improvement, they also reveal how deeply gender disparity remains. Most female-directed films still receive limited release and lack marketing support. Despite momentum, women still account for fewer than 15% of directors on top-grossing films.

That’s why this list exists—to highlight the bold, brilliant, and unexpected movies directed by women that have shaped pop culture without always getting the credit.

 

Blockbusters and Franchise Movies Directed by Women

Movies directed by women - Margot Robbie as Barbie smiles while driving a pink convertible with Ryan Gosling as Ken beside her, against a bright blue sky with a large pink Barbie logo in the background.
Movies directed by women- Barbie (2023), directed by Greta Gerwig, became the highest-grossing solo female-directed film of all time—blending satire, color, and culture in one blockbuster.

Twilight (2008) – Catherine Hardwicke

A vampire romance turned cultural juggernaut. Hardwicke set the tone for an entire genre of YA adaptations.

Kung Fu Panda 2 (2011) – Jennifer Yuh Nelson

One of DreamWorks’ highest-grossing animated sequels, directed by a Korean-American woman, a rarity in Hollywood animation leadership.

Wonder Woman (2017) – Patty Jenkins

Jenkins made history with this superhero film, grossing over $800M worldwide. It proved that women can lead and direct high-stakes action franchises.

Barbie (2023) – Greta Gerwig

The highest-grossing film by a solo female director. Gerwig turned pop culture into a billion-dollar feminist satire.

Rewriting True Crime

Woman of the Hour (2024) – Anna Kendrick

Based on the real story of serial killer Rodney Alcala, who appeared on The Dating Game in 1978. Kendrick directed, produced, and starred in the film, which premiered at TIFF and was released by Netflix in October 2024.

Instead of glamorizing violence, Kendrick centers the experience of Cheryl Bradshaw, the contestant who unknowingly chose Alcala. It’s tense, sharp, and emotionally intelligent, a remarkable debut.

Movies directed by women - Anna Kendrick, wearing headphones and a sweater with star patterns, operates a large cinema camera on the set of her directorial debut Woman of the Hour.
Movies directed by women- Anna Kendrick behind the camera on the set of Woman of the Hour (2024), her first film as director. The film premiered at TIFF and was later acquired by Netflix. Image credit: Business Insider

Indie Darlings & Awards Surprises

Booksmart (2019) – Olivia Wilde

A wild, witty, and heartfelt high school comedy that became a critical hit and festival favorite.

Eleanor the Great (2025) – Scarlett Johansson

A 94-year-old woman moves to New York after her best friend dies, accidentally impersonates a Holocaust survivor, and finds unexpected friendship. Johansson’s directorial debut premiered in the Un Certain Regard section at Cannes 2025.

The Chronology of Water (2025) – Kristen Stewart

Adapted from Lidia Yuknavitch’s memoir. Stewart’s first feature film as a director premiered at Cannes 2025, also in Un Certain Regard. Visually experimental and deeply raw.

 

Actor-to-Director Debut Comparison

Movies directed by women - Scarlett Johansson, wearing a Yankees cap and headphones, directs on the set of her debut film Eleanor the Great.
Movies directed by women- Scarlett Johansson behind the scenes of Eleanor the Great (2025), her first film as director. The project premiered at Cannes and earned a 5 minutes standing ovation. Image: Dailymail.com

Side-by-Side Overview

CategoryBooksmart (2019)Woman of the Hour(2024)Eleanor the Great(2025)The Chronology of Water(2025)
DirectorOlivia WildeAnna KendrickScarlett JohanssonKristen Stewart
Festival DebutSXSWTIFFCannes (Un Certain Regard)Cannes (Un Certain Regard)
GenreTeen comedy, coming-of-ageTrue crime, psychological dramaComedy-drama, character studyExperimental memoir adaptation
Critical Response⭐️⭐️⭐️ Highly acclaimed⭐️⭐️ Praised for tone & restraint⭐️⭐️ Warm, emotional, soft⭐️ Quietly respected, divisive
Directorial StyleSnappy, modern, wittyMeasured, focused, restrainedSoft, emotionally intuitiveBold, fragmented, poetic
Standout FeatureGenre reinventionReclaims true crime for womenSubtle humanity, elder protagonistEmotional and sensory non-linearity
Awards / Sales ImpactGolden Globe noms, breakoutNetflix acquisition, critical buzzCannes ovation, solid reviewsCritical buzz in indie/queer cinema
Cultural LegacyGen Z staple, widely lovedFeminist retelling of media traumaMature debut, under-the-radarGritty, niche, very indie
Main LimitationFamiliar structureModest scope, less flashyDoesn’t challenge visual formNot accessible, too abstract for some

Summary: What Each Director Nailed

CategoryBest ExampleWhy It Stands Out
Most Culturally ImpactfulBooksmart (Wilde)Redefined the genre, launched a directorial career
Most Tightly DirectedWoman of the Hour (Kendrick)Balanced tone, pacing, and character control
Most Emotionally MovingEleanor the Great (Johansson)Honest, layered emotional tone
Most Visually AmbitiousChronology of Water (Stewart)Risky, poetic, personal, but divisive

 

You Had No Idea…

American Psycho (2000) – Mary Harron

Yes, the film about Patrick Bateman was directed by a woman. Harron satirized toxic masculinity before it was mainstream.

The Babadook (2014) – Jennifer Kent

Often cited as a landmark horror film directed by a woman, The Babadook gained critical acclaim for its psychological depth and cultural impact. A grief-soaked masterpiece that turned motherhood and mental illness into haunting metaphors, and later became an unexpected gay icon within queer communities.

You Were Never Really Here (2017) – Lynne Ramsay

Joaquin Phoenix stars in this minimalist, psychological revenge thriller. Ramsay’s direction balances brutality with silence, trauma with style.

How Women Shaped Culture (Even When Hollywood Tried to Ignore Them)

Women have been shaping the culture, on stage, on screen, and behind the camera. Whether rewriting what survival looks like, reclaiming their voices from silence, or literally owning the rights to their work, they’ve been doing the real directing all along.

(Not to name names, but some actresses seem more comfortable shaping a brand than shifting power, and might ruin decade hardwork in gender disparity.)

 

Here’s what shaping culture actually looks like and what the challenges are;

She didn’t just change pop, she changed the business model.

Long before it trended, Cassie was surviving in plain sight. Here’s why her silence was never weakness.

The brand is polished. The silence is louder. When power is a PR product that could ruin progress in gender disparity.

Why inclusion still makes people uncomfortable, and who bears the cost of “debate.”

Anna Kendrick’s debut asked a bigger question: What does survival actually look like, when no one’s listening?

 

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