I feel like this is probably extracting a plotline and ignoring A LOT of other stuff, but we'll see.
I hope they illustrate exactly why, in a system of hereditary passage of leadership, woman play a specific role that is very difficult to escape by the nature of their biology. I'm SURE they will spend equal time on the boys/men that could be COMPLETELY disenfranchised by the self-same system, or equally as enslaved to it, their ability (or lack of ) to produce a viable heir can make their rule tenuous at best. This isn't a system that was just unfair to woman, it was a system unfair to ALMOST EVERYONE but was still one of the few systems that enabled stability and security for periods long enough to allow civilization to progress.
I feel like this topic has become jaded as it has been worked over to death. "The Last Duel" was at least was creative enough to do a lot of this with just a few physical actions by the women in the film instead of overly belaboring it. I'd rather see the momentum move towards how women created their own power structures alongside that of the men with equal opportunities for decisive action in other arenas, even if the history books make little mention of it.