HomeEntertainmentThe Substance Review: Demi Moore, Margaret Qualley-Starrer Is A Searing Takedown of Ageism And Unrealistic Beauty Standards

The Substance Review: Demi Moore, Margaret Qualley-Starrer Is A Searing Takedown of Ageism And Unrealistic Beauty Standards

The Substance debunks “beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder” and other lies we tell ourselves. A sharp critique of ageism and unrealistic beauty standards, The Substance makes its message clear—none of us are immune to aging—at some point in our lives, “Jurassic fitness” might just become a reality for us.

October 27, 2024 / 22:57 IST
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A thing of beauty is a joy forever: its loveliness increases; it will never pass into nothingness. Coralie Fargeat’s satirical body horror ‘The Substance’ debunks this and a hundred other lies we tell ourselves. Beauty doesn’t lie in the eyes of the beholder as much as it does in the physical attributes that live up to western beauty standards. A perfect butt with no stretch marks, a banging body and flawless skin is all it takes for Sue (played by the ravishing Margaret Qualley) to break the TRP ratings with her show “Pump it Up with Sue”.
Where does Sue get this beauty from? How does she keep getting younger? What’s her secret? It is obviously the unconscious body of a 50-something Elisabeth (Demi Moore, in a career-best performance) from which Sue extracts the stabilizing fluid.

The Substance Movie: Plot

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Sue keeps getting younger as Elisabeth ages faster than usual. “Remember, she is you. Respect the balance and there will be no inconveniences”, says a voice on the other side of the phone. As Sue goes out, dates hot men and appears on the cover of Vogue, an old Elisabeth with wrinkled skin struggles to find balance.
The Substance, both the film and the green-coloured liquid, serves as a reminder of one's mortality. Taking life force out from Elisabeth disbalances Sue. The phrase “Remember you are one” flashes across the screen in a split-second each time Sue doesn't switch and gets destabilized. The transactional nature of beauty—which makes Sue and Elisabeth get into a blood-soaked, mirror-breaking, furniture-shattering physical confrontation—is portrayed by Fargeat to near-perfection.

The Substance Movie: Performances