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Horror has always been unkind to older women (the "hag" trope). But recent films have flipped the script. The Visit featured a terrifying elderly grandmother. Relic (2020) used dementia as a haunting, physical horror. Florence Pugh in Midsommar wasn't old, but the film’s subversion of the "old crone" archetype paved the way for films like The Night House where Rebecca Hall (late 40s) battles grief and supernatural forces with intellectual ferocity.
The industry fetishized youth. Leading men like Sean Connery, Harrison Ford, and Tom Cruise continued playing romantic leads opposite actresses young enough to be their daughters. Meanwhile, their female counterparts—think Goldie Hawn or Jane Fonda in the 1980s—struggled to find projects that didn't revolve around menopause or meddling. Three trailblazers forced the industry to look up from its spreadsheets. milfsugarbabes
Streep didn't just play roles; she weaponized her craft. By winning an Oscar for The Iron Lady (2011) at 62 and starring in the musical smash Mamma Mia! at nearly 60, she proved that audiences had an unquenchable appetite for older female talent. She made aging look like an asset. Horror has always been unkind to older women
