Angela Bassett (nominated for an Oscar at 64) has spoken about how she was told she was "too young" to play a mother in her 30s, and "too old" to be a love interest in her 50s. The window is narrow, and for women of color, it is a razor's edge. The most exciting trend is the abandonment of the "rivalry" trope. We are moving past the cliché of the young ingénue stealing the husband from the older wife. Now, we see narratives of solidarity. The Eight Mountains , Women Talking , and The Lost Daughter (directed by Maggie Gyllenhaal at 44) focus on the shared trauma and strength between generations of women.
When we watch Michelle Yeoh fight with trophies and taxes, or Emma Thompson rediscovering her body, or Jean Smart getting the last laugh, we are not just watching movies. We are witnessing a correction of the historical record. For 100 years, cinema told women they were only worth what they looked like. Now, cinema is finally telling the truth: that a woman’s face at 60 holds more stories, more pain, and more joy than a thousand ingénues ever could. milftripcom
This was reinforced by the "Male Gaze"—a film theory term coined by Laura Mulvey. Cinema was shot from the perspective of a heterosexual male viewer. Mature women, who did not fit the narrow mold of passive beauty, were effectively invisible. If we need a precise turning point to mark the "before" and "after," it is the 95th Academy Awards. When Michelle Yeoh took home the Best Actress Oscar for Everything Everywhere All at Once , she shattered a century-old glass ceiling. At 60 years old, she became the first self-identified Asian woman to win the award. But more importantly, she won playing a character who was deeply real : a tired, overworked, middle-aged laundromat owner. Angela Bassett (nominated for an Oscar at 64)