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Niki Caro’s Bold Stand at Camerimage: Is Hollywood Ready to Stop Ghosting Women Behind the Camera or Just Playing Pretend?

Added on November 19, 2025 inMovie News Cards

Ever wonder if the stars have been secretly scripting Niki Caro’s Hollywood journey? Well, if Scorpio’s known for depth, determination, and occasionally stirring the pot, Caro’s career might just be the celestial embodiment of that energy. From a quiet indie home run with Whale Rider—a drama so heartfelt it practically begged the world to pay attention—to wielding the giant, glittery megaphone of Disney’s sprawling Mulan, she’s balanced the intimate with the epic like a cosmic tightrope walker. Now, stepping into the limelight as head of the jury at Camerimage, she’s not just judging cinematography; she’s spotlighting an industry grappling with its sketchy gender math. And honestly? Isn’t it about time someone did? Amid pandemic dramas and streaming revolutions, Caro’s story feels like a screenplay about resilience, talent, and, yes, a bit of star-powered irony. Who else but a genuine trailblazer could handle all this while cooking up a spiritual sequel to the film that launched her legend? Pull up a chair, because this saga’s just getting started. LEARN MORE

For more than two decades, New Zealand filmmaker Niki Caro has built a career that has swung between breakout indie success and the upper echelons of studio filmmaking.

She first drew international attention with Whale Rider, a small, community-rooted drama that became a global phenomenon and earned Keisha Castle-Hughes an Oscar nomination. Caro followed with North Country (2005) for Warner Bros., The Zookeeper’s Wife (2017) for Focus, and then the biggest leap of her career: Directing Disney’s live-action Mulan (2020), which was shot across continents and budget tiers and became one of the pandemic-era’s most scrutinised studio releases. Most recently she helmed the Jennifer Lopez thriller The Mother (2023) for Netflix, a hit for the streamer.

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This year she steps into a different spotlight: Heading the main jury at the Camerimage Film Festival in Toruń, Poland, the industry’s most influential event dedicated to cinematography. It is a conspicuous appointment, coming a year after Camerimage faced intense criticism over the gender imbalance in its official lineup. While the festival is taking steps to address the issue, this year’s competition lineup remains disproportionately male, which just 3 female DPs represented out of the 13 titles up for the 2025 Golden Frog for best film.

Caro is blunt about the trend she sees across the industry, far beyond one festival. “You can just see it statistically,” she says. “Less female cinematographers are shooting films. Less female directors are directing films. So when you see those numbers ticking down, not ticking up, they’re going in the opposite direction. They’re going the wrong direction, and it’s quite depressing.”

Caro has long run female-heavy departments, including on Mulan. “All the [head of department roles], except for the production designer, were female,” she says. “You get a bunch of girls running a show like that, everybody’s communicating, everybody’s organized. There’s no bullshit.”

The problem, she stresses, is not the absence of talent but the absence of chances. “There’s a tremendous lack of opportunity for the new ones to come through. And so the ones that do break through have a strength of character that you should never underestimate.” If the system is regressing, she says, the artists are not: “Do not underestimate the brilliance and the tenacity of these artists.”

Caro is quick to point out that neither gender or dogma will shape her choices as jury president. She heads up a three-woman, two-man jury, which includes cinematographers José Luis Alcaine (Volver, Pain and Glory) and Ellen Kuras (Lee, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind), actor Tim Blake Nelson (Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?, Watchmen) and producer Sabrina Sutherland (Twin Peaks, Inland Empire).

“We’re all judging the films through the lens, of cinematography,” she says. “For me as a director, the main question is: Does the cinematography, the choices that are made behind the camera, help to tell the story, are they telling the story the right way, and is it moving the audience?”

Across her career, Caro has worked at nearly every scale of production. She describes Mulan as a moment when the complexity and ambition multiplied quickly. “When I first read it, I was like, ‘Holy shit, this is huge.’ And then it just got huger.” Working with cinematographer Mandy Walker, she says, required “meticulous planning, so that when we got to set, we could just fly.” She remembers the shoot as “a really exhilarating experience” with “the cameras on the cranes just flying around.”

But big-studio visibility also meant public scrutiny. She says she was aware of the cultural pressures around Mulan, both the weight of “the legend of Mulan,” and the expectations of Disney’s global audience, but no amount of preparation anticipated the pandemic derailing Disney’s theatrical plans. “There were other things at large at the time, not the least of them being the pandemic and the movie not screening theatrically, which was incredibly difficult.”

Working in the streaming era has brought its own adaptations. Her Netflix thriller The Mother skipped theaters but reached one of the service’s largest global audiences. “As somebody who has kind of come up through independent film, [it] just took my breath away to understand how many people were watching this film,” she says. Regretfully, she notes, “it’s becoming rarer and rarer to be able to see smaller films on big screens.”

Between jury duties in Toruń, Caro is deep into development on several personal projects, including a New Zealand-set adaptation she describes as spiritually linked to her breakthrough feature. “I’ve optioned a couple of books. One of them is a a novel by a first-time New Zealand author [A Beautiful Family by Jennifer Trevelyan] and it feels to me like a companion movie to Whale Rider.

Set New Zealand’s Kāpiti Coast in 1985, A Beautiful Family and narrated by ten-year-old Alix, who befriends 12-year-old Māori boy Kahu and embarks on a search for a girl presumed drowned two years earlier.

“The character Alix is Pākehā, she’s European, not Māori [as in Whale Rider],” says Caro, “but I feel like the two films are sort of holding hands across my career.” With the script “pretty much ready,” Caro is currently casting the project. After years of taking on large-scale studio films that arrived fully packaged, she says the return to building something small and personal from the ground up has been energizing. “To be able to develop and nurture these smaller films from seeds is really nice. It’s very hands on. Feels very bespoke.”

The 33rd Camerimage Film Festival runs Nov. 15–23 in Toruń, Poland.

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