Older Women Showing Their Pussies

Older Women Showing Their Pussies




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Older Women Showing Their Pussies






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STILL DOING IT shatters stereotypes while celebrating old age. It's touching, humorous and gives an aging nation hope for fun in the future.

The cult of youth may govern ads and billboards, but if women can find partners at 80 (as the charming Frances does in this film) age is no bar to sexual expression. Eavesdropping on these thoughtful, vivid women-some from traditional backgrounds, some sex radicals, one a lesbian activist is fascinating. This documentary will start a million conversations.

Women's Studies Brandeis University

These nine amazing women challenge ageist notions revealing lives filled with romance and revelations. This is a truly important film.

Ph.D. Author, AGEWAVE and AGE POWER

My male and female students were totally engaged and inspired by these groundbreaking older women.

The heroines of Deirdre Fishel's documentary have broken a taboo almost as strong as the one that prohibits incest. They pursue a sexually active life when they are in their sixties, seventies, and eighties. They are pioneers in resisting the restrictions of an ageist culture and role models to women of the baby boom generation. In the U.S., where women over 65 is the fastest-growing demographic, plastic surgery and youth enhancing beauty products are big business. But rather than trying to turn back the clock, these women insist on celebrating their age and experience. STILL DOING IT is a hoot, a blast of energy, and an irreverent challenge to the ageism harbored by just about everyone in our youth obsessed culture".

South by Southwest International Film Festival


Seattle International Film Festival


SilverDocs/AFI Diccovery Channel Film Festival


Museum of Television and Radio Documentary Film Festival


New Fest: New York's Gay, Lesbian and Transgendered film festival


Rocky Mountain Women's Film Festival


American Society on Aging Conference


SAGE's 4th National Conference on LGBT Aging


It's time to reimagine our care infrastructure.

Tackling bullying among boys at its core: the cult of toughness and silence boys live by.

Challenging old ideas about making a family.
Sperm Donor X: A Different Conception


Inspiring Change for a Healthy Ocean

Vigilantes, heroines, or criminals? Find out what really happened during the bloody labor revolt of 1878 on the island of Saint Croix.

The film explores the complexities, repression, and criminalization of social movements fighting for land and ecological restitution in Eswatini (formally known as Swaziland), Mozambique, and Zambia.

A woman’s quest to solve a family mystery reveals a forgotten humanitarian tragedy.

A powerful tale about the rise of Korea’s global adoption program

Soledad tells the story of a woman from Central America who fled gang violence to seek asylum in the U.S.

A grandmother’s quest to move past a terrible tragedy to a place of possibility.

Suspended between life and death, a Mexican American mother explores uncertainty through dance.

Wrestling Ghosts is an intimate and heart-opening documentary about parenting, childhood trauma and healing.

Immigrant women and children transform their lives through courage to speak out, community solidarity and the U Visa.

Three generations of life at a communal ranch in New Mexico

Women, this film could save your life.

Winning isn’t always black or white.

An intimate look at how welfare reform affects the lives of four women.

It's time to reimagine our care infrastructure.

A search for an extraordinary woman leads to a lost Oscar®-winning film

A lifetime demanding self-defense. One night they fought back.

Re-released for a new generation: the first film to document the klezmer music revival.
A Jumpin’ Night in the Garden of Eden


A powerful intergenerational story about family, memory, and creativity

Three generations of life at a communal ranch in New Mexico

It's time to reimagine our care infrastructure.

A mother and a daughter with an intellectual disability must part ways after living together for 64 years.

89 year-old Phyllis challenges her family by making a surprising decision about end-of-life care.

A journey of loss, resilience and renewal

A Master Weaver’s journey to understand a spruce root hat found in a retreating glacier.

Three women in their '70's let us eavesdrop on their creative lives.

Can an Asian fetish lead to true love?

From Stonewall to #LoveWins, three gay seniors navigate the adventures of life and love in their golden years.

A piercing look at censorship and suppression in the news media
Tell the Truth and Run: George Seldes and the American Press


A film about age, adventure and the open road

An examination of social and cultural change, and the impact of such change upon individuals
Breaking Silence: The Story of the Sisters at Desales Heights


A portrait of death, dying, and the power of love and creativity to heal.

Aging with dignity in a supportive community

An Academy Award® nominated short film about a neighbor with a disability and a community with a plan.

Managing the changes of advancing years

A grandmother begins a new life as an underground artist.

A conversation between a decommissioned vessel and her shipbreakers.
All That Perishes at the Edge of Land


Re-released for a new generation: the first film to document the klezmer music revival.
A Jumpin’ Night in the Garden of Eden


A powerful tale about the rise of Korea’s global adoption program

A striking journey through Peru that offers a new perspective on travel and tourism.

The untold story of cigarmakers and literature in Cuba.

Soledad tells the story of a woman from Central America who fled gang violence to seek asylum in the U.S.

A mesmerizing, poetic journey through contemporary Uganda that explores the challenges of cross-cultural representation.

Youth empowerment and transformation on an organic farm in Hawaii

Faith, Friendship, Family and the challenges of being different in America
Flying in the face of this culture's extreme ageism, Still Doing It explores the lives of older women. Partnered, single, straight, gay, black and white; nine extraordinary women, age 67-87, express with startling honesty and humor how they feel about themselves, sex and love in later life and the poignant realities of aging. Outspoken for their generation, these women mark a sea change. Women over 65 have been the fastest growing part of the population for decades, but with boomers turning 65, the number of older women is skyrocketing. Still Doing It looks at this society's complex relationship to women and aging with surprising and revelatory results.
Flying in the face of this culture’s extreme ageism, Still Doing It explores the lives of older women. Partnered, single, straight, gay, black and white, nine extraordinary women, 67-87, express with startling honesty and humor how they feel about themselves, sex and love in later life and the poignant realities of aging.
Outspoken for their generation these women mark a sea change. Women over 65 are already the fastest growing segment of the population and when the baby boomers begin to turn 65 in 2011 their numbers will swell.
Still Doing It reveals the wonderful truth that many older women are actually beginning intense romantic relationships after 65. Frances, 87, continues to enjoy a palpably sexual relationship with journalist David Steinberg, the love of her life she met at 80. Aware that many people see her as "nothing but an old woman," she is defiant in living life on her own terms.
We meet Ruth who met her husband Harry after 30 years of dating hell; Harriet, a writer and bohemian who continues to see sex as the core of her life; and Freddie, who enjoyed the best sex of her life with her third husband Syd.
We also meet sex expert Betty Dodson who met her boyfriend Eric, 47 years her junior, in cyberspace when she was 69. Betty's life (and her humor) stand not only in defiance of the sexual compliance expected of women, but as a reminder that what is really happening is often far more interesting than the limited scenarios the media create.
We also follow lesbian partners Ellen and Dolores who met each other in their 60’s. For Ellen, who was a model 1950’s suburban housewife, sexuality is central. It is why she endured the pain of leaving her good, but sexually unsatisfying marriage. For her the women's movement rescued her from an isolation that began as a child when she realized she was attracted to girls and culminated when her strong feelings for women finally made her realize she had to get a divorce. Ellen revels in her relationship with Dolores, and as an activist fights to ensure that older gays and lesbians are not forced back into the closet in nursing homes and senior centers.
Still Doing It. not only delves into each woman's personal history but also into the broader history these women lived through. Archival footage, stills and music are integrated to take the audience from the 1940s and 1950's to the explosive energy of the women's movement and the sexual revolution. Entering these past decades reminds us that these times were far more radical than the conservative times we are living in now. The doc thus illustrates the reality that while many older women are still reluctant to speak about their personal lives there is a new vanguard of women over 65 who came into their own later in life and have taken that strong sense of themselves and their sexuality into their older age. Even the two churchgoing African American great grandmothers, Juanita and Elaine, featured in the film are redefining themselves as they age.
Still Doing It follows the lives of these nine extraordinary older women as well as this society's complex relationship to aging with surprising and revelatory results.
Deirdre Fishel has been writing and directing documentaries and dramas for 25 years now. Her life's goal is to create complex, realistic portraits that challenge mainstream stereotypes and work to improve lives. Deirdre started her career at WNYC-TV where she produced a half-hour program on women community organizers working to save the South Bronx. She went on to write/direct RISK, a dramatic feature, which premiered in competition at Sundance and was broadcast in 35 countries.
Find out about new releases, specials and discounts, and ways to engage your students and community through independent film.

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Is nakedness invisibility’s opposite? Maybe not, but, if it’s unapologetically displayed, it can be a kind of antidote to erasure.
“Bebe on Sand,” 2014. Photographs by Jocelyn Lee
“Deborah at Aquinnah Beach in September,” 2020.
“Nancy at 78, Maine at 18 (Aunt and Grandniece),” 2018.
“Nancy Floating at Quitsa Pond,” 2016.
“Judith at Home,” 2009. Photographs by Jocelyn Lee
“Bebe and Pagan in the Red Room,” 2004.
“Bebe and Pagan Pregnant with Twin Girls,” 2012.
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For decades, getting “Ettlingered” was a rite of passage in the book world. The photographer, now retired, looks back.
Overheard in New York: Browsing at Mood Fabrics
“All the bridesmaids are wearing mauvy dresses, but she wants me to stand out. The only thing is I don’t want anything rectilinear.”
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Some clichés about the cycle of life are true. When you are raising young children, the days are long and the years are short. And when you’re a woman, you will, at about age fifty, become invisible. All our lives, as girls and younger women, we prepare ourselves to be looked at. We grow accustomed to registering —to attracting, evading, or denouncing the male gaze. In “ Mrs. Dalloway ,” Clarissa, newly aware of herself as a woman of a certain age, walks down the street thinking, “This body, with all its capacities, seemed nothing—nothing at all.” The cultural critic Akiko Busch, quoting that line from “Mrs. Dalloway,” notes that “a reduced sense of visibility does not necessarily constrain experience.” True, but it takes some getting used to, and when it’s punctuated, as it often is, by condescension—when strangers are suddenly addressing you not even as “Ma’am” but, with a verbal wink, as “young lady”—you may not want to get used to it.
Is nakedness invisibility’s opposite? Maybe not, but, if it’s voluntarily, unapologetically displayed, it can be a kind of antidote to diminishment and erasure. A nude portrait of a woman older than, say, sixty is an unusual image—even a taboo one. To make such photographs, and, even more so, to pose for them, is an act of defiance. In the course of her career, the photographer Jocelyn Lee has been drawn to nude bodies of all shapes and ages. Her latest book, “Sovereign” (Minor Matters Books), features a selection of her photographs of women who range in age from their mid-fifties to their early nineties, posing naked, frequently outdoors and in natural settings.
Lee’s color images of older women are painterly, classical, but also frank. Skin puckers, crinkles, and sags. Bellies poof and pleat. A silver-haired woman stands knee-deep in a pond strewn with autumn leaves, looking directly at the camera, her elbows angled back like wings to reveal one intact breast and one mastectomy scar. A naked woman sits on a blanket of moss in the woods, her breasts and belly soft, so at ease she might be napping. In “Nancy at 78, Maine at 18,” a woman and her grandniece stand nude on a beach. Side by side, their long-legged, curly-headed bodies rhyme, but also remind us of the ways time will remake our familiar, corporeal selves. The image is not some grim memento mori, though. The women lean comfortably toward each other, touching shoulders; the younger woman’s arm loops through the elder woman’s. Behind them, the sea and sky are a light-suffused blue.
Lee, who is fifty-nine, lives part of the year on a lush, wooded property outside of Portland, Maine. She’s taken some of the portraits of older women at a pond near her house, and others on beaches at Martha’s Vineyard and elsewhere. The natural settings, devoid of sociological detail and inherently beautiful, tend to banish ironic readings and extend a certain benevolence to the naked subjects. We aren’t in paradise here—nobody in these photos looks that naïve—but we are not in any sort of judgment-laden social space, either. Lee told me that she hoped the locations implied the warmth of sun on the body—“that kind of comfort and love”—and communicated the idea that we are “all essentially sensual creatures.”
“The camera can be very cruel depending on how you use it,” she said. “There’s a whole tradition of photography that’s based on criticality and cruelty. Diane Arbus —whom I love, by the way—looked for unflattering moments to create a sense of drama. Sometimes that can be done with the juxtaposition of elements in a space, the exaggeration of the appearance of wealth or poverty, harsh lighting.”
Lee said that, by contrast, her work had sometimes been criticized for being “too earnest or romantic.” But she made her peace with that a long time ago. Through her photography, Lee has always tried to understand “what lay ahead.” When she was still in college, long before she had children herself, she photographed a pregnant friend in the nude as part of her thesis project. “This was before the Demi Moore Vanity Fair cover; people didn’t really know what a pregnant woman looked like,” she said. Through the years, she took many nude photographs of her mother, who, she says, had a remarkable ease in her own skin. Lee continued taking pictures of her as she was dying of cancer.
I’m about six months older than Lee, and, all in all, I consider aging to be far better than the alternative, as my own mother, who died at sixty, the age I am now, used to say. Still, I prefer the cloudy mirror in my bathroom to any in which I can
Renee Olstead Leak
Mia Yim Nude
Bella Bellz Booty

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