Alice Guy-Blaché is not well-remembered by many today as a pioneer in the filmmaking industry. She was the first female to direct a film, and among the first of all filmmakers, not just women, to make a narrative fiction film. Alice was a prime example of the success and for the most part unhindered outpouring of passion when a woman is not prevented from pursuing her dreams because of her identity. Her films were groundbreaking, coloring films by hand and using an equally groundbreaking sound system all while multitasking directing and filming. Guy was forgotten by history for her pioneering, often being replaced with male pioneers in film that were deemed more “important,” but as a result of the past couple decades’ push for equal rights, history is shedding light on the female geniuses of the past like Guy, whose passion and ingenuity deserves to be remembered by filmmaking historians.