Mysterious Skin is a 2004 Dutch-American drama film directed by American filmmaker Gregg Araki, who also wrote the screenplay based on Scott Heim's 1995 novel of the same name. The film is Araki's eighth, premiering at the 61st Venice International Film Festival in 2004, although it was not more widely distributed until 2005.
Mysterious Skin | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Gregg Araki |
Produced by | Gregg Araki |
Screenplay by | Gregg Araki |
Based on | Mysterious Skin by Scott Heim |
Starring | Joseph Gordon-Levitt Brady Corbet Michelle Trachtenberg Mary Lynn Rajskub Elisabeth Shue |
Music by | Harold Budd Robin Guthrie |
Cinematography | Steve Gainer |
Edited by | Gregg Araki |
Distributed by | Tartan Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | United States Netherlands |
Language | English |
Box office | $2.1 million |
Mysterious Skin tells the story of two pre-adolescent boys who are sexually abused by their baseball coach, and how it affects their lives in different ways into their young adulthood. One boy becomes a reckless, sexually adventurous male prostitute, while the other retreats into a reclusive fantasy of alien abduction.
Screenplay
Two eight-year-old Little League teammates Neil McCormick and Brian Lackey both experience life-altering events in the summer of 1981 in Hutchinson, Kansas. Neil, the son of an irresponsible single mother and already discovering his homosexuality, is sexually abused by the Little League coach, who leaves town after that summer. Brian, with a neglectful father and a mother who is often working, remembers it starting to rain during a game. The next thing he remembers is being in the crawl space of a house with a bloody nose, having no memory of the intervening five hours.
Neil views the coach's abuse as love and becomes predominately attracted to "bearish" middle-aged men. He begins prostituting himself at the age of 15, and continues doing so three years later when he moves to New York City, where his best friend, Wendy Peterson, now lives. Neil has an emotional encounter with a client, Zeke, who is dying from AIDS in New York. Neil initially suspects the man wants sex, but soon realizes he wants nothing more than to feel another person's touch. Neil afterward begins withdrawing from prostitution and takes a job as a cashier with assistance and encouragement from Wendy.
Brian suffers from chronic nosebleeds, blackouts and bedwetting years after entering the crawl space. Recurring dreams about being touched by a strange, bluish hand eventually lead Brian to suspect that he may have been abducted by aliens. Another boy wearing the same Little League uniform begins to appear with him in these dreams later on. Brian meets a woman named Avalyn Friesen at 18 who also believes she was abducted by aliens. They start to form a friendship, but he panics and refuses to speak to her again when she makes advances towards him.
Brian sees a photo of his Little League team as he tries to untangle his confused memories, recognizing a young Neil as the other boy from his dreams. Taking the initiative to meet his former teammate, Brian instead meets Neil's mother and Neil's friend, Eric Preston, learning more about Neil through Eric. Neil returns to Hutchinson to spend Christmas with his mother There, Neil and Brian meet for the first time in over a decade. After breaking into the house that was previously rented by the Little League coach, Neil tells Brian what happened that night: the coach offered to drive Brian home with Neil after a baseball game was rained out and Brian didn't have a ride home. They all rather went to the coach's house, where the coach performed sex acts on the boys and made them perform sex acts on each other. A porch light caused the atmosphere to have an eerie blue color. Brian collapsed face-first onto the floor after the coach & Neil put his garments back on, giving him a bloody nose. Brian breaks down crying after learning the truth and is comforted by Neil as Christmas carolers sing "Silent Night".
- Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Neil McCormick
- Chase Ellison as young Neil McCormick
- Brady Corbet as Brian Lackey
- George Webster as young Brian Lackey
- Michelle Trachtenberg as Wendy
- Riley McGuire as young Wendy
- Jeff Licon as Eric Preston
- Mary Lynn Rajskub as Avalyn Friesen
- Elisabeth Shue as Ellen McCormick
- Bill Sage as Coach
- Chris Mulkey and Lisa Long as Mr. and Mrs. Lackey
- Richard Riehle as Charlie
- Kelly Kruger as Deborah
- Rachael Nastassja Kraft as young Deborah
- Billy Drago as Zeke
Both Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Michelle Trachtenberg, by the time the film went into production, were looking for independent films where making money was not the main goal. Trachtenberg was filming EuroTrip (2004) in Prague when she first received the script, and quickly decided to join production. Gordon-Levitt was especially praiseful of Araki for allowing him to join production, and commented in a 2005 interview: "It is a really different role for me, and I'll always be really grateful to Gregg for believing that I could do a role like this. I've played the nice kid, and the smart one or funny one and even the angry one, but Gregg was the first one to call me sexy, and I'll always be really grateful for that." Araki approached Gordon-Levitt, who was by then struggling to find work for over a year, after seeing him in Manic (2001). Made on a low budget, filming commenced in August 2003 and lasted only three weeks, which gave the cast and crew no possibility of doing retakes.
A number of measures were taken to avoid exposing the child actors to the sexual and abusive aspects of the story. Although their parents were given the entire shooting script to review, the boys were given separate scripts which included only the activities they would be performing, and their roles and the characters' relationships were explained to them in innocent terms. All of the sexual abuse involving children is implied rather than being directly depicted, and the scenes in which this seduction and abuse takes place were filmed with each actor performing alone and addressing the camera rather than the other actor, then edited together, so the children did not see or hear the performance by the adult actor playing the abuser. (This subjective approach to filming was consequently used in various places throughout the film.)
Mysterious Skin received very positive reviews. The film received an 85% "Certified Fresh" rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes based on 104 reviews with an average rating of 7.4 out of 10. The sites consensus states: "Bold performances and sensitive, spot-on direction make watching this difficult tale of trauma and abuse a thought-provoking, resonant experience." On Metacritic, which uses a "metascore", the film holds 73 out of 100 based on 32 reviews.
Lou Lumenick from the New York Post commented, "Not for the squeamish, but it is a beautifully crafted and thoughtful film that genuinely provokes." Ella Taylor from LA Weekly wrote “A warped, but beautiful and strangely hopeful, coming-of-age tale.” Roger Ebert gave Mysterious Skin 3.5 out of a possible 4 stars, describing it as "at once the most harrowing and, strangely, the most touching film I have seen about child abuse". Steven Rhea of The Philadelphia Inquirer awarded the film 3 out of 4 stars, stating that "Mysterious Skin" ultimately "manages to deal with its raw, awful subject matter in ways that are both challenging and illuminating". Gordon-Levitt was praised by critics for his performance, and the actor has stated that people on the streets had come up to him to applaud his performance in the film. His portrayal of a teenage hustler inspired director Scott Frank to cast him in The Lookout (2007).
According to psychologist Richard Gartner, the novel Mysterious Skin is an uncommonly accurate portrayal of the long-term effect of child sexual abuse on boys.
Rating issues
The US MPAA rated the film NC-17, which the studio appealed unsuccessfully. The film was released theatrically in the US without a rating.
The film was the subject of some controversy in Australia, where the Australian Family Association requested a review of its classification, seeking to have the film outlawed due to its depiction of pedophilia. They suggested that the film could be used by pedophiles for sexual gratification or to help them groom children for sexual abuse. The six-member Classification Review Board voted four-to-two in favour of maintaining an R18+ rating. The controversy is referenced in a review excerpt from The Sydney Morning Herald on the Region 4 DVD that reads: "How anyone could have wanted it banned is beyond me"; film critic Margaret Pomeranz expressed that the film does more for the case against pedophilia, stating: "People who do indulge in crimes like that, if they saw this film they would understand the damage that they do."
The film score was composed by Harold Budd and Robin Guthrie.
Other songs include:
- 2004 Bergen International Film Festival – Jury Award
- 2006 Polished Apple Awards – Best Movie
- 2006 Icelandic Queer Film Festival – Best Fictional Work