Today, the term "mature women in cinema" no longer evokes a sigh. It evokes a roar.
Look at the French model—actresses like Juliette Binoche and Isabelle Huppert, who never accepted the American expiration date. In their fifties and sixties, they play lovers, criminals, artists, and CEOs with a ferocious sexuality and vulnerability that American cinema once reserved for 25-year-olds. Binoche in Let the Sunshine In (2017) is a messy, hopeful, radiant mess of a woman looking for love—not as a joke, but as a birthright.
Yet the battle isn't over. For every Killers of the Flower Moon giving Lily Gladstone (37) or a cameo to Tantoo Cardinal (73), there are still too many scripts where a 55-year-old actress is paired with a 65-year-old actor who is never asked to "age appropriately." The gender gap in Hollywood’s geriatric romance remains stubborn.
L'enregistrement d'écran dans PowerPoint ne fonctionne pas
Application d'enregistrement de réunion
Enregistrer la réunion Microsoft Teams