Article 6BTN0 There’s no shame in waging war on old age – long live Martha Stewart | Martha Gill

There’s no shame in waging war on old age – long live Martha Stewart | Martha Gill

by
Martha Gill
from on (#6BTN0)
Conquering diseases that appear among elderly people will eventually make life better for everyone

When members of the Harga - Ari Aster's Swedish cult in Midsommar - reach the age of 72, they are instructed to jump off a very high cliff. They have reached the end of their life cycle," the Harga explain, Swedishly, to their dumbfounded American guests.

As horror films go, it's an unexpected twist - all the more so because it bucks what might be described as the genre's most unrelenting theme, which is that the elderly are almost always villains, not victims. Throughout the long history of horror, the old have waited, jealously, to feast on the young, either in over-friendly cabals (Get Out, Rosemary's Baby, Hereditary), or alone (X, Saw). All versions, perhaps, of horror's longest-lived baddie: the vampire.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 250 words to be considered for publication, email it to us at observer.letters@observer.co.uk

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