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    Home » Director Gina Prince-Bythewood Connects With “The Woman King”

    Director Gina Prince-Bythewood Connects With “The Woman King”

    By SHOOTWednesday, August 31, 2022Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1837 Views
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    This image released by Sony Pictures shows Viola Davis, left, with director Gina Prince-Bythewood on the set of "The Woman King." (Sony Pictures via AP)

    With a cast headlined by Viola Davis, film is set to premiere at Toronto Film Festival

    By Jake Coyle, Film Writer

    NEW YORK (AP) --

    Gina Prince-Bythewood didn't get very far into reading the script for "The Woman King," a historical epic about a real West African army of female warriors, before she knew she wanted to direct it.

    "Literally five pages into it I knew it was going to be my next film," Prince-Bythewood says. "I felt so connected to these women. I was so excited. When they rise up out of the grass I was like, 'Ohhhh, I want to shoot that.'"

    When "The Woman King" — which does begin with the imposing image of Viola Davis and a regiment of female soldiers stealthily emerging from tall savannah grass in the moonlight, with swords drawn — rises up in theaters on Sept. 16, it will emerge as a potent force on a movie landscape that has seldom seen something like it.

    Drawing from the real history of the Agojie, women warriors who defended the West African kingdom of Dahomey (present-day Benin) from the 1600s until the late 19th century, "The Woman King" is muscular action-drama that puts female power front and center at a time when women's rights are imperiled.

    "It's a time right now in our country, and it permeates worldwide, where women are feeling completely attacked. In some ways, it feels like we're powerless in the situation," Prince-Bythewood said in a recent interview. "We can look up on the screen and see the warrior in these woman and believe we all have this innate warrior in ourselves and believe that we can stand up and fight.

    "I want women to be able to tap into their fight because that's what we're going to need in this moment," added Prince-Bythewood.

    "The Woman King," which will premiere at the Toronto Film Festival in early September before Sony Pictures opens it in theaters, is a clear standout in the upcoming fall movie season. Davis stars as an African warrior named Nanisca, with Thuso Mbedu, Lashana Lynch ("No Time to Die"), Sheila Atim co-starring as fellow soldiers. The film unfolds against the backdrop of the slave trade, a scourge that the Dahomey king (John Boyega) mulls a response to. The action, though, is driven by the strength and cunning of the Agojie, and by Davis' titanic presence.

    For Prince-Bythewood, "The Woman King" is a kind of mission statement and capstone to her 30-year career. A high-school basketball player and a track runner at the UCLA, Prince-Bythewood brought that athletic mindset to filmmaking, breaking through with 2000's "Love & Basketball," with Sanaa Lathan and Omar Epps.

    "Love & Basketball" has only gotten better with time ("Double or nothing?" remains one of the movies' most romantic lines). And in 2020, "The Old Guard" brought Prince-Bythewood to a wider audience than ever before. The Netflix superhero film, with Charlize Theron, became one of the streamer's most-watched films. (A sequel, which Prince-Bythewood is producing, is in production.)

    "'The Old Guard' was the first film I did for streaming," she says. "I didn't know how it was going to feel given how much I love theatrical. There's something amazing about going global in an instant. But the release Sony has planned for this is global, too."

    And to her, "The Woman King" stands as a metaphor for the film industry, where such stories and protagonists have rarely made it to the big screen. Most of the department heads on the film were women. Dana Stevens wrote the screenplay. Cathy Shulman and Maria Bello are producers. Polly Morgan shot it. Terilyn A. Shropshire edited it.

    "There are great people out there who are not getting opportunities, so I look past the resume," says Prince-Bythewood. "At a certain point, someone did that for me. Certainly Mike De Luca for 'Love & Basketball.' So it's exciting to have that type of energy where people get up from a production meeting to look around and see mostly women. I think they all were warriors in what we had to pull to get this movie made."

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    Category:News
    Tags:Gina Prince-BythewoodThe Woman KingToronto Film Festival



    Review: Director Nia DaCosta’s “28 Years Later: The Bone Temple” 

    Wednesday, January 14, 2026

    You know what zombie movies never seem to have enough of? Dancing. They've got gore and screaming and lots of guttural snarling, but no boogie. That all changes with "28 Years Later: The Bone Temple" and the dancing here is to — naturally off-kilter — 1980s heroes Duran Duran.

    The fourth entry in an ever-more engrossing franchise is absolutely bonkers — and a triumph. It mixes dark, queasy disembowelment and laugh-out-loud humor in a way that both subverts the genre and leads a way out of it, too.

    Nia DaCosta directs from a returning Alex Garland script and it starts right where 2025's "28 Years Later" — directed by Danny Boyle — left off. If this is your first encounter with the series, you don't necessarily need to go back to 2002's "28 Days Later" but at least to last year's entry.

    Garland's script crackles with jokes about Britain's National Health Service and "Teletubbies" as it sets up an ultimate showdown between good and evil across a flower-and-meadow countryside. DaCosta is fabulous, leaning into the dark and the light with assurance, nailing the twisted tone and celebrating the weirdness.

    We pick up immediately after Alfie Williams' Spike is rescued from a gang of zombies — excuse me, a gang of infected — by another gang of predators led by Sir Jimmy Crystal, whom we first met as an 8-year-old orphan in the last movie. He's all grown up and become a sadistic satanist, which happens sometimes without good adulting.

    Jimmy — played by a diabolical Jack O'Connell in a tracksuit and gold chains, like a low-level Mafia lieutenant from "The Sopranos" — leads a band of young psychopaths, as deadly to both virus survivors as the snarling, semi-human infected. They don blond wigs and each is named Jimmy.... Read More

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