When actress Issa Rae presented the Academy Award nominees for Best Director on Monday, she voiced what a lot of people were thinking with four words: “Congratulations to those men.”
“I think those are moments that really matter, because I think it’s important when you’re inside of the Hollywood system to be able to critique it,” Roxana Hadadi, a pop culture and film writer who has contributed to the A.V. Club, told Know Your Value. “That moment kind of captured how people feel about the status quo.”
Not a single woman was nominated for Best Director this year, and only five women have been nominated in that category in the Oscar’s 92-year history. Only one woman has taken that top award: Kathryn Bigelow for “The Hurt Locker” in 2010. This year’s shut-out came despite the critical acclaim and box office success of films directed by women, including Greta Gerwig’s “Little Women,” Lorene Scafaria’s “Hustlers” and Lulu Wang’s “The Farewell.”
“A lot of the women who were perceived as front-runners in the screenwriting and directing categories, specifically, were shut out in a way that was sort of surprising, but probably shouldn’t be,” said film critic Jason Bailey, who is a contributor to the New York Times. “There was a real feeling [that the films that] were highly nominated — you know, eight, nine, 10, 11 nominations — were all stories about men, told by men.”
“There’s still this overwhelming sense that women’s stories and women storytellers are not seen as weighty and as important and as award-worthy as their male counterparts,” Bailey added.
The Academy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
“Joker” led the pack with 11 nominations this year, and it’s vying for best picture alongside “Ford v Ferrari,” “The Irishman,” “Jojo Rabbit,” “Little Women,” “Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood,” “Marriage Story,” “Parasite,” and “1917.”
While Gerwig’s “Little Women” didn’t receive a nod for Best Director, its six nominations also include Best Actress, Best Supporting Actress, and Best Adapted Screenplay. Gerwig herself was the woman most recently nominated for Best Director for “Lady Bird” in 2018. Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, Todd Phillips, Sam Mendes, and Bong Joon-ho were nominated in the Best Director category this year.
“Famously, the Best Director category is the one that we’re seeing a lot of the focus on in terms of disappointment and pushback,” Bailey said. “And that’s because it’s traditionally a category that just does not recognize women. It’s also a field where women struggle for opportunities and for equal footing.”
He praised Gerwig’s adaptation of “Little Women” as a unique interpretation of a classic story through a new lens and called her omission in the Best Director category “egregious.” He also pointed to writer-director Lulu Wang, who’s film “The Farewell,” was talked about for best actress, best supporting actress, even for best picture, for screenplay — but came up empty handed.
“This has always been an organization that has had some difficulty recognizing the work across the gender spectrum, if you will,” Bailey said.









