17 TV Shows and Movies About Real Women in Power
Reading Time: 8 minutesIn the wake of the death of Queen Elizabeth, movies and shows with women in charge.
This post began life as a roundup of films built on female power—a good tie-in to the forthcoming release of the Viola Davis-starring historical epic The Woman King, about the all-female fighters of the Kingdom of Dahomey (modern-day Benin) in the 19th century, no? But history has overtaken that idea with the death of Queen Elizabeth II. It’s impossible to consider the relationship between women and power without taking into account the end of the longest period of rule by any woman in the history of humanity.
To some, she was a beloved grandmother figure; to others, a steadfast ruler who lead with the softest touch imaginable. Still others couldn’t separate her from the dark specter of British colonialism. None of these interpretations is all-encompassing, nor does any one cancel out any other. Power—whether inferred via inheritance, politics, or by some other means—is a complex matter, which is probably why its consideration has served as fodder for so many interesting movies.
Take The Woman King, which is not about an actual monarch but follows a powerful female leader and is set in Dahomey, a country that was later colonized by France. A group of highly skilled women warriors protecting their lands from outside invaders is the stuff of killer narratives—but some quarters have quibbled that the movie elides Dahomey’s own history of enslavement and conquest.
It’s all led me to wonder if we’re ever been, or ever will be, very good at evaluating our real-life female leaders, who may be judged, lauded, and vilified in unfair ways. But in the modern age, TV shows and movies have, at least, done a decent job of giving us memorable, sometimes provoking considerations of historical women in power.
The image of power in this Oscar, uh, favorite resides less in Olivia Colman’s portrayal of the hilariously batty Queen Anne, but in that of her court. The scheming, plotting, and seductions that go on between the queen and courtiers Sarah Churchill (Rachel Weisz) and Abigail Masham (Emma Stone) reveal that women can not only wield power as capriciously as men, but that the frequent historical necessity of working behind the scenes has made these particular women masters of a gloriously cutthroat game.
Where to stream: Digital rental
There are two modes of female power on display here. There’s Greta Garbo, an enduring cinematic icon who scrupulously avoided the typical movie star schmoozing and promotional tours in favor of showing up, giving deeply memorable performances, and going home to her art collection. There’s also Queen Christina, who Garbo portrays here, the ruler of Sweden for a roughly 20-year period beginning in 1632 and who, like Garbo, enjoys a well-earned reputation for gender ambiguity and queerness, some of which is on display in this pre-code film that sees her entertaining several suitors, both male and female. The film smartly conveys the Swedish people’s response to their ruler: to some, she’s a weak-willed woman; to others, she’s unsuitably domineering. Too horny for some; too frosty to others. Double standards, always.
Where to stream: Digital rental
This 2015 Finnish film offers a slightly more modern take on Sweden’s Queen (more accurately, King) Christina, with more of an emphasis on the monarch’s nontraditional relationship with gender roles and sexuality.
Where to stream: Prime Video, Hulu, Tubi, Kanopy
It’s sometimes called ‘soft power,’ particularly when wielded by women: the ability to achieve political aims through convincing rather than by coercion. Here it’s the true-ish story of Crown Princess Märtha of Norway (Sofia Helin). Forced to flee the Nazi takeover of her country with her children, she eventually made her way to the United States. Forming an intense friendship (some suggest a bit more) with Franklin Roosevelt (Kyle MacLachlan), Märtha lobbied a divided United States to provide aid and military support to Norway, both behind-the-scenes and publicly, by touring the U.S. as an informal ambassador raising interest in both the anti-Nazi cause and her own country’s interests.
Where to stream: PBS
Sofia Coppola’s frothy take on the life of the notorious French queen (Kirsten Dunst) finds empathy in the story of one of modern history’s most vilified women, without going so far as to make her heroic. Coppola manages to project the idea of a modern teenager back in time, forcing us to question how prepared anyone could be to leave their family and take over a high profile role in another country at the age of 14—especially when the man with top billing (Jason Schwartzman’s King Louis) is so feckless. Though she was undoubtedly pampered and entitled, it’s hard not to wonder if just maybe history has been a little too quick to pin all the failings of pre-Revolutionary France on a single young woman.
Where to stream: Digital rental
I’ll be frank is saying that Princess Ka’iulani isn’t a great film, but it’s an entirely watchable one that speaks to a moment in Hawaiian history that’s not terribly distant, but still little discussed in the continental U.S. Ka’iulani (Q’orianka Kilcher) was the heir to the throne of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, but lost any hope at ever claiming it following the arrest of Queen Liliuokalani and the overthrow of the monarchy by a consortium of mostly mainland American businessmen (the islands’ monarchs believed, quite mistakenly, that they could play ball with western interests). The film considers Ka’iulani’s time in exile, seeing her face racism in England before and after the coup; being a crown princess in her own nation does little to spare her from the condescension, or outright hostility, of her hosts. In America, she successfully lobbies for a halt to the annexation of her country before a change of administrations renders some of her work moot.
Where to stream: Kanopy
Our ambivalent response to female power goes back millennia; Cleopatra is the last, rather than the first, female Egyptian ruler who history has looked askance at. Losing her throne, and her life, to one of the more overtly misogynistic ancient civilizations (compared to Egypt, anyway), Romans wrote the story of that country’s last monarch, casting her largely as an unnatural harlot who held to power purely on the basis of her sexual prowess. In reality, the queen was far savvier, even if what seemed like smart strategic alliances at the time didn’t play out as expected. The movie comes much closer to a modern conception of Cleopatra’s power, even if still falling back on plenty of 1960s ideas of her seductive powers.
Where to stream: HBO Max, Fubo
From a woman aided by the Underground Railroad system, Harriet Tubman quickly became one of its most effective conductors, and is now remembered as the most important single name in the entire operation, an unquestioned leader who approached the quest for freedom with a religious zeal (her religious convictions seemed, indeed, to have a lot to do with her fortitude). Later, she lead soldiers in battle during the Civil War before becoming a leader in the suffragist movement. If any American deserves to be considered royalty, it’s certainly her.
Where to stream: Digital rental
All historical fiction is, ultimately, about the time it’s made in as much as it is about the time it’s set, and that’s very explicitly the case with The Great, a sumptuous take on the rise and reign of Russian Empress Catherine the Great, but one that’s also very much a dark comedy. The arc here, at least in the first season, involves Catherine’s darkly comic miseducation in leadership and power. Though born in Prussia, she slowly comes to love her adopted country so much that she realizes there’s only one thing to do: overthrow and kill her husband Peter (Nicholas Hoult), who is buffoonish and monstrous in equal measure. No ‘soft power’ here.
Where to stream: Hulu
An adaptation of the Phillips Gregory novel, The Spanish Princess (as with its predecessors, The White Queen and The White Princess) is occasionally a bit too soapy for its own good. What it does do very effectively, though, is capture the indefatigability of Queen Catherine of Aragon (Charlotte Hope), the first wife of Henry VIII in the days before he set his sights on younger prizes. Due to be cast off after the death of her first arranged marriage in England, Catherine quite simply refuses to leave, recognizing that her only hope for her desired future lies with the new king-to-be, Henry.
Where to stream: Starz
Christopher Eccleston holds his nose long enough to crown Cate Blanchett’s Queen Elizabeth I, a wildly unlikely heir to the throne of England who became one of that country’s exemplars of monarchy. In many ways, it’s a film about choices: we meet Elizabeth first as a young woman with no expectation of rule, but see that, as she gains power, her options contract rather than expand. Given the enormous pressure to select a husband, and the limitations placed on her choice, she ultimately opts for public celibacy as the ‘Virgin Queen,’ reflecting, in a way, the impossible divide modern women must often navigate between career and family.
Where to stream: Starz
History has never been shy about positioning Mary and Elizabeth I as lifelong rivals, reveling in the idea that a powerful female leader requires a female arch-rival. In this case, there’s a bit of truth to the idea, even if it’s vastly overstated for dramatic purposes (the two never even met). Saoirse Ronan plays the title character, who became queen within days of her birth, and whose fate was sealed seemingly from that very moment. Stubborn and determined in ways that would likely have been applauded in a male ruler, Mary is undermined by the men in her life at every single moment, her power being bolstered when useful, and undercut when someone near to her has different ideas.
Where to stream: Digital rental
Queen Victoria (played here by Judi Dench) is known, in many ways, for her relationships: the ‘Widow of Windsor’ spent what was seen as a deeply unseemly amount of time mourning her husband, Prince Albert, before taking on a new nickname, ‘Mrs. Brown,’ for her friendship (or perhaps more) with the thoroughly uncouth, and entirely unacceptable Scottish servant, John Brown (Billy Connolly). Even at this late point in her reign, Victoria’s family and advisers were desperate to reign in what they saw as her impulsive attraction to Brown, but, as was so often the case in Victoria’s life and career, she persevered through sheer stubbornness. She knew her power, and she had no intention of ending a relationship that she enjoyed.
Where to stream: Britbox, Hoopla, Pluto TV
The always transcendent Aishwarya Rai plays the title role here, a real-life Mughal princess of the sixteenth century. Arranged in marriage to Akbar, an emperor-to-be trained to be utterly merciless in his rule, Jodhaa steadfastly sets her own terms in her betrothal, standing up to Akbar effortlessly, including by refusing to sleep with him until she knows him well, even after they’ve married. Jodhaa is portrayed as a partner in power, and a moderating influence on a husband who’s been taught his entire life that ruthlessness is the only means of leadership.
Where to stream: Netflix
Mark Rylance’s Thomas Cromwell is the main attraction in this BBC adaptation of the Hilary Mantel novels, but not long in the background is Claire Foy’s Anne Boleyn; it’s one of the finest portrayals of the much-maligned queen in TV or cinema, even if her screen time is limited at the outset. Here we see a complex woman with ambition, privileged and with an air of entitlement, who also quickly comes to realize that she’s walking a tightrope. Her power, deriving from a deeply fickle king, has unwritten and ultimately treacherous limitations.
Where to stream: PBS, Hoopla
Is there more power in silence? That seems to have been one of the central questions of Queen Elizabeth II’s reign. Both by constitutional necessity, and her own interpretation of the role of a modern British monarch, she rarely saw fit to express emotions beyond benign amusement or the affection of a slightly austere mother. It worked, largely, until the death of Princess Diana, which crea a crisis point for the queen personally, as well as for the entire monarchy. The Queen’s silence was seen as a slight to the beloved former princess, and the country wasn’t willing to accept that. It’s a take on a phenomenon we see often with female politicians and rulers: too much emotion, and they’re hysterical and not to be trusted. Too little? They’re cold and indifferent.
Where to stream: HBO Max
Titles might convey power, but rarely have they stood without money to back them up. Octavia Butler plays a fictionalized version of Madam C. J. Walker, a woman who turned a hair-care recipe into a cosmetics empire that made her one of the richest people in America as well as the country’s first Black millionaire…and also the first woman to reach that monetary milestone under her own steam. Just as significantly, she made a point to pass along the power she’d gained, creating structures and organizations to aid and empower other black businesswomen.
Where to stream: Netflix