When the news broke last week that Joss Whedon, who created Buffy the Vampire Slayer and directed the first two team-up movies in Marvel's Avengers franchise, would be directing a Batgirl movie for DC, the response was a combination of enthusiasm and soul-searching.
As Scott Mendelson wrote in Forbes, "If we lived in a world where Catherine Hardwicke had a shot at directing The Fighter, or ... if it were more common for the likes of Lexi Alexander to helm Punisher: War Zone, then I wouldn't care about Joss Whedon directing Batgirl. But if you're going to presume that a female director can't make Batman and can't direct Batgirl, where does that leave us?"
It's a good question, and it invites another line of inquiry. One of the most prominent arguments advocates of equality and inclusion in Hollywood have advanced in recent years is the idea that female directors (as well as directors from other communities that are under represented both on-screen and off) should be hired because their perspectives are inherently different from that of their male counterparts, or because stories about women and girls must be informed by their experiences.
It's a compelling idea, especially when it's paired with the sense that the entertainment industry has become stale and repetitive on other levels. It's also conceals a series of potential traps.
On the first level, that idea could be leveraged to get women opportunities to tell some stories, but also to reinforce a gender essentialism that shuts them out of other projects.