Women Make Movies
Film Firsts
Genres/Themes
Film Movements
100

Often called the "Mother of the French New Wave," this filmmaker blended fiction and documentary as seen in her debut film, La Pointe Courte.

Agnes Varda

100

These French brothers are credited with inventing the Cinématographe, a device that functioned as a camera, projector, and film printer.

Auguste and Louis Lumière

100

This genre is what is typically associated with European films

Art Cinema

100

This film movement contained internationally renown directors like Wim Wenders, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, and Werner Herzog

New German Cinema

200

This pioneering filmmaker is considered the first woman to direct a film, starting her career in 1896. She went on to create over 1,000 films.

Alice Guy-Blache

200

The 1895 screening of Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory marked the first-ever public showing of films in this city and in this European country.

Paris, France

200

These two completely different filmmaking styles were considered prominent in early cinema

Actualites/Documentary and Spectacle

200

First started in the Soviet Union in the 1930s, this film movement focused on workers and the accomplishments of a Communist government

Socialist Realism

300

This Italian filmmaker became the first woman nominated for the Academy Award for Best Director

Lina Wertmuller

300

This country was the first to push forward the idea that films could be used as a tool to educate the masses.

Soviet Union

300

This German director achieved his commercial success in Hollywood by making melodramas

Douglas Sirk

300

Unique for its use of humor as social critique, this film movement embraced the surrealist art movement

Czech New Wave

400

This Dutch filmmaker made history when her "feminist fairy tale" won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film

Marleen Gorris

400

This Swedish director is credited with being the filmmaker that started the academic field for studying films

Igmar Bergman

400

This country was typically known for its use of landscapes, psychological dramas, and sexualtiy

Sweden

400

The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari is considered the first film of this German film movement

German Expressionism

500

This Hungarian director won the Caméra d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival for her debut film My 20th Century

Ildikó Enyedi

500

This film studio was the first one established in Denmark and quickly became vertically and horizontally integrated studio.

Nordisk Film Company

500

This influential Polish director first gained international recognition for his trilogy about World War II and reflecting on post-war trauma

Andrzej Wajda

500

This set of rules, used by the Dogme 95 movement, aimed to strip filmmaking down to its basics

Vows of Chastity