Ten films with extraordinary women

I don’t know if you are aware that the first female director ever mentioned was the Parisian Alice Guy-Blaché. She began her relationship with the seventh art in 1894 and was a contemporary of the Lumière brothers. But who is remembered? It goes without saying…

7

PERSEPOLIS

Marjane Satrapi (2007)

Good stories about women can come from anywhere, even from such repressive places for them as Iran. In 2007, the director Marjane Satrapi surprised the world of moviegoers with her gem of an animated film called Persepolis. The film is a denunciation of religious fanaticism and repression against Iranian women by Islamic fundamentalists.

Why? The director and main character of the story is looking for both individual freedom and the freedom of her people, and along the way she shows us the difficulties of a woman who has to go into exile but never forgets her home. She does so through comics first and animated film later in this delightful adaptation. Persepolis is a work that portrays the courage of Iranian women. Sadly, the reality that it depicts is still part of the everyday lives of Persian women, who even today are forced to cover their heads with a scarf before they leave their homes.