D.E.B.S. Robinson directed the short film
D.E.B.S. (2003), produced by
POWER UP. The short film has won four awards which includes the Bearfest-Big Bear Lake International Film Festival Jury Award for Best Short Film, the PlanetOut Short Movie Awards Grand Prize, the
Philadelphia International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival Jury Prize for Best Lesbian Short Film and New York Lesbian and Gay Film Festival Award for Best Short. Robinson went on to direct a feature-length adaptation of
D.E.B.S. (2004).
D.E.B.S (2004) is a lesbian romantic comedy about a "spy-in training Amy Bradshaw and a supervillian Lucy Diamond. Amy is assigned to go after Lucy. However, Amy starts to develop feelings for her." D.E.B.S has made a big impact in queer cinema. Senior entertainment writer named Adam Vary described
D.E.B.S as "the gay spy movie" in his article "The New New Queer Cinema". Writer Katrin Horn remarked that
D.E.B.S is a groundbreaking movie as the film works to desexualize femme identity previously centered in lesbian chic cinema. Robinson's use of narrative and stylistic techniques in
D.E.B.S offered a new lenses into lesbian representations and the structure of heteronormative romantic comedies.
Girltrash! In 2007, Robinson created the online series
Girltrash! for OurChart, a social networking website aimed primarily at lesbians. In 2014, Robinson wrote the screenplay for a
musical feature film and prequel to her
Girltrash! series,
Girltrash: All Night Long, directed by Alexandra Kondracke. Robinson was also one of the producers for the film. The film is a lesbian musical drama about two rock and roll musicians named Daisy and Tyler during a night out in the LGBTQ+ subculture of Los Angeles. The film won the audience award in the 2015 Paris International Lesbian and Feminist Film Festival.
Professor Marston and the Wonder Women Robinson wrote and directed the film
Professor Marston and the Wonder Women that was released in 2017. The film focuses on
William Moulton Marston, a Harvard educated psychologist who created
Wonder Woman in the 1940s. Marston's received help from his wife
Elizabeth and
Olive Byrne, a research assistant, in his creation of the super heroine. The movie also includes the polyamorous relationship Marston, Elizabeth and Olive were in and how that effected their careers and lives. The film's inclusion of a lesbian relationship between Elizabeth Marston and Olive Byrne after William's death was criticized and strongly denounced by Christie Marston, daughter of William’s son Moulton, saying she was "blindsided" by the narrative since nobody from the film ever reached out to her or her family. For her part, Robinson admitted in an interview with Abraham Riesman at
Vulture that she made no effort to contact the family. She admitted that the entire story line was fictional, stating: "I wanted to kind of be able to explore my own interpretation of what the story was…. I felt like their story had been kind of hidden from history for a long time, and I kind of wanted to excavate and interpret what I found and then write the film."
Strangers in Paradise In 2017, Robinson worked with cartoonist
Terry Moore on a feature film adaptation of graphic novel
Strangers in Paradise. ==Television==