HOLLYWOOD actress Demi Moore left fans wanting more at a recent red carpet event.
Stepping out at the Toronto Film Festival in Canada yesterday, the star looked flawless and ageless, leaving fans in shock.
The fresh-faced actress, who turned 61 at the end of last year, looked far younger than her years as she headed to the premiere of her new film The Substance.
The movie sees the former Ghost star in the role of Elisabeth Sparkle, a former A-lister who opts to use a black market drug in a bid to create a new 20-something version of herself.
Speaking to Deadline about the role she said: "It clearly pushed me out of my own comfort zone."
"I felt that it tackled the subject matter of dealing with not just aging and that kind of male perspective of the idealized woman as women have many times bought into, but also that battle that exists within ourselves."
Read more Demi Moore
"That intense harsh judgement that we exist with, that pursuit of perfection that doesn’t exist."
The film has gained much media attention, with the actress posting pictures on her Instagram of a shoot for Variety magazine three days ago.
Michelle Pfeiffer was quick to respond with three fire emojis, while Kyle Richards put 'Stunning!"
Others called her a "True icon," while one fan called her the: "Sexiest woman on the planet."
Most read in Celebrity
Over on Reddit fans were quick to praise her 'age defying beauty' with one saying: "What the f**k. 61 years? She looks beautiful."
Ageing is a subject the mother of three isn't afraid to address, telling The Outlet: "I’m not perfect. Sometimes I’ll look at a photo and think, 'I look old,' or whatever. But I’ve learned to deal with it."
She continued: "I’m at a point where I’m writing my own story, as opposed to my story being dictated to me based on my age."
"Who says somebody can’t look a certain way or do certain things? Your 60s is not what your 60s used to be."
"There’s a part of me that’s enjoying figuring it out as I go along."
She has also addressed the subject of ageing with Variety magazine in the past, saying: “When I was 40 but didn’t look like what they imagined 40 should look like, they didn’t know what to do with me."
"I didn’t work that much, because I wasn’t 20 or 30. I think if we really look at the deeper crux of this, what we’re looking at is this old idea that women’s value and desirability was tied to their fertility.”
“When I think of my grandmother at 60, she in a way seemed to be already resigned to being old."
"But I feel, in so many ways, more alive and present than ever."