Early 20th century The presentation of women as scientists on film goes back to the early days of cinema. The first known presentation may be 1929's
Woman in the Moon. Written by
Thea von Harbou and directed by
Fritz Lang, the film follows a group of Germans as they travel to the Moon. The group includes Friede Velten, an assistant on the trip, who chooses between two potential husbands and ultimately decides to stay on the Moon and live a new life there. It would take almost ten years before another woman scientist would appear onscreen. When she did, Alice Swallow was a side character, a hard worker who was too busy to marry
Cary Grant, who turned to fun-loving socialite
Katharine Hepburn instead. Nevertheless, 1938's
Bringing up Baby showed millions of people around the world a level-headed, independent woman who did not need to rely on a man to move her life forward. The earliest portrayal of a real-life woman scientist may be the 1943 film
Madame Curie starring
Greer Garson as Polish-French physicist
Marie Curie in 1890s Paris. These portrayals in A-list movies were rare and it would take decades before they become more common-place. However, the 1950s saw a proliferation of low-budget American
B-movies which show-cased female scientists and post-graduates. They were normally associated with a male boss and involved in a romantic storyline, as well as a scientific one. One of the earliest B-movie portrayals of a fictional qualified scientist may be 1951's
Flight to Mars which tells the story of male engineer and his assistant Carol Stafford, who earned her degree in "spaceship engineering". 1951 also saw
Unknown World where a group of scientists, including Dr Joan Lindsey, drill into the earth to create an underground environment where humanity could escape and survive a future nuclear holocaust.
Late 20th century After the
Swinging Sixties in the west, women began to feature front and centre of large-budget movies, often in a more serious tone. An early example was the 1970 film
The Andromeda Strain which showed Dr Ruth Leavitt as one of several scientists investigating a deadly organism of extraterrestrial origin. Other examples include;
Gorillas in the Mist (1988) Gorillas in the Mist is a film based on the book with the same title by
Dian Fossey and follows her as she leaves the United States to study gorillas in
Rwanda and
Uganda. As she bonds with the gorillas, she worries about
poachers and devotes her time to protecting the animals. In the film, Fossey is said to be depicted as an independent woman, breaking the common trope of women being the homemaker. This may be seen as an unusual portrayal of women scientists and it concentrates on the scientific work, and does not have a romantic story attached to it.
Jurassic Park (1993) The 1993 film
Jurassic Park, based on the novel with the same title by
Michael Crichton, depicts a fictional
paleobotanist, Dr. Ellie Sattler. She is shown to have extensive knowledge about dinosaurs and plant life throughout the movie. She is said to be portrayed with great physical ability, allowing her to survive multiple attacks from dinosaurs.
Contact Contact was released in 1997 and told the fictional story of Dr Eleanor "Ellie" Arroway, a
SETI scientist who finds evidence of extraterrestrial life and is chosen by the government to make first contact.
Nutty Professor II: The Klumps (2000) Nutty Professor II: The Klumps is the sequel to the 1996 slapstick, science-fiction dark comedy,
The Nutty Professor.
Janet Jackson portrays
molecular biologist Denise Gains. Denise is the love-interest for the male hero, Sherman Klump. Gaines faces a dilemma where she must balance her professional career with her romantic relationships. In this film, she is hesitant to take a full professorship at the University of Maine, but she will be able to stay and pursue further research with Klump.
Gravity (2013) The 2013 film
Gravity, directed by
Alfonso Cuarón and starring
Sandra Bullock and
George Clooney, is often cited as a
feminist film due to Bullock's starring role as an
astronaut. The film has been critiqued that
Gravity "proves that a woman can anchor an action-packed blockbuster that does
not have to include violence, superheroes, weapons and/or huge death tolls." While the film's lead is a woman, she gets help from her male counterpart, played by Clooney. Some critics describe Bullock's character as "the very model of the damsel in distress," as she can never get out of a situation on her own and must lean on Clooney's character to do the heavy lifting. The role of Bullock's character is thought to be an act of defiant feminism, as she is the lead in a science fiction film, but some viewers find that the film actually subscribes to traditional gender stereotypes and does not portray Bullock's character as a true independent woman. In contrast, Vanessa Reich-Shackelford from Westcoast Women in Engineering, Science, and Technology while considering the character of Dr. Ryan Stone, wrote: "I came to realize that writers Alfonso (also director) and Jonás Cuarón had created one of the most positive representations of a woman in
STEM on screen so far."
Arrival (2016) The 2016 film
Arrival revolves around the character of linguist Dr. Louise Banks, played by
Amy Adams, who facilitates the very first instance of human communicative contact with an alien population. The film makes an obvious effort at employing a feminist theme, primarily through the way the backstory shapes Dr. Banks and frames her as an accomplished professional and mother.
Hidden Figures Hidden Figures was released in 2016 and told the true story of three female African-American mathematicians,
Katherine Johnson,
Dorothy Vaughan and
Mary Jackson (engineer) who worked at
NASA during the
Space Race.
Black Panther (2018) The critically acclaimed film
Black Panther features Princess Shuri, a young, Black, female character who excels in the STEM field as an intelligent and creative technology whiz and inventor. Portrayed by
Letitia Wright, Princess Shuri is the younger sister of
T'Challa (
Chadwick Boseman), the eventual king of
Wakanda, and the mastermind behind harnessing the power of
vibranium, specifically in the creation of the Black Panther suit. The
Marvel Cinematic Universe has portrayed over 60 fictional scientists, about a quarter of them being women, including computer expert Dr Helen Cho, biologist Dr Maya Hensen and biochemist Agent
Jemma Simmons. == Archetypes of scientific women in films ==