TIME

Women filmmakers capture the fear of 2020

SOMETIMES WOMEN REPRESENT FRAGILITY AND innocence in horror movies, symbols of purity worth saving; what would King Kong have been without his tiny captive inamorata Fay Wray? Other times they’re sympathetic companions or spokespeople for misunderstood monsters. But their allure goes further and deeper than that—especially when it’s women who are doing the looking.

Today the term is thrown around more loosely than its originator, filmmaker and film theorist Laura Mulvey, intended. Even when there’s a man behind the camera, the lens doesn’t always simply cater to man’s desires. Women love watching other women; we identify, we admire, and sometimes we feel a frisson (or more) of desire. Other times we recoil, though that may

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She moves with a lightness in a heavy world—bold, playful, and self-aware. She is thoughtfully outspoken for the oppressed and displaced. She founded an influential editorial platform, Service95, to cover cultural topics and address humanitarian conc

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