Badmilfs - Kat Marie - Curiosity Gets You Spitr... -
Some of the most potent cinema about mature women has come from the horror and thriller genres, where aging is treated as the ultimate body horror. Coralie Fargeat’s The Substance (2024) starring Demi Moore is a ferocious, visceral allegory about an aging actress who uses black-market cell-replicating technology to create a younger version of herself. The film is a grotesque and brilliant mirror held up to the industry's gaze, forcing the audience to confront their disgust of the aging female body.
It is worth noting that American cinema is late to this party. European and Asian cinemas have long revered the mature actress. The French have never stopped venerating Isabelle Huppert (71), casting her as a ruthless CEO or a sexual libertine. In Italy, Sophia Loren continued to star in sexy, leading roles well into her 70s. In Korea, veteran actresses like Yoon Yeo-jeong (won an Oscar at 74 for Minari) are treated with national treasure status. Hollywood is merely catching up to a global standard: that a woman’s value as a performer does not decline with her estrogen. BadMilfs - Kat Marie - Curiosity Gets You Spitr...
For decades, Hollywood operated on a cruel arithmetic: once a leading lady turned 40, her love interests got younger, her screen time got shorter, and her options shrank to "mother of the protagonist" or "quirky neighbor." Some of the most potent cinema about mature
But something has shifted. Quietly at first, then with the force of a cultural tidal wave, mature women have seized the narrative—not as supporting characters, but as the undeniable center of gravity in cinema and entertainment. It is worth noting that American cinema is