Adapted from Thierry Jonquet's novel Tarantula (original French title: Mygale) by Pedro Almodóvar and his brother Agustín Almodóvar, The Skin I Live In is a complex and, as the background layers are peeled away through revelation, deeply disturbing and chilling film.
It begins in the present day where we see Robert Legard (Antonio Banderas), a prominent plastic surgeon and medical researcher who, because of the tragic death of his wife in a fiery auto accident several years earlier, is obsessed with creating a new kind of skin superior to the skin we're born with, one that is not only both tougher and more resistant to burning and injury but also heals quicker and with little to no scarring. In his mansion, Dr. Legard has a special patient under his private, personal care, a young woman named Vera (Elena Anaya), on whom he is trying his new skin out. Our first impression is that Vera is a burn victim that Legrand is caring for, but it quickly becomes clear that Vera is more prisoner than patient. But just who is Vera? And how did she come into Legrand's rather questionable 'care'? And why does she so strongly resemble Legrand's dead wife?
As in so many his films, The Skin I Live In has many of Almodóvar's almost trademark themes running all through it: complex familial relationships; the intertwining of family and personal secrets; the nature of desire, brutality and obsession; the lengths to which individuals can and will go; how actions can have the most unexpected and sometimes devastating consequences, and how, ultimately, we can never escape our pasts.
The performances are pitch perfect, most particularly Antonio Banderas' controlled and controlling and casually chilling Legard, who has his mansion wired so that he can observe his 'patient' from almost any part of the house, and Elena Anaya's Vera with her perfect face and body and the haunted eyes that peer out from the skin she lives in, always aware that she is being observed. Added into the mix and subtly working in other elements from classic standards of horror are Marisa Paredes's Marilia, Legard's old housekeeper who serves as a kind of matronly Igor to Legard's Victor Frankenstein, fiercely loyal but openly disapproving; Roberto Álamo's Zeca, a brutal criminal on the run who serves as a kind of Hyde to Legard's Jekyll lust, rage and animal cunning to Legard's cool controlled calculation. And last but not least, Jan Cornet's Vicente, a callow young fool whose impulsive self-indulgence triggers a chain of events with consequences more dire than he could imagine. All of whom are bound to each other in ways known and unknown.
The only reason I rate this four stars instead of five and call it a near-masterpiece instead of an all-out masterpiece is in how the final acts play out. After taking the viewer through a series of ever deeper and increasingly disturbing revelations, Almodóvar seems to settle for what I felt was a disappointingly conventional resolution. But that said, the film still stands out for all of the unexpected places it did take you before that slip back into the expected. There may be times when you'll think you've seen this movie before and you know what's going on, but I assure you, you haven't and you won't until the revelations have been made.
Highly recommended for any fan of Almodóvar's and for anyone else who likes well-crafted films that really push the boundaries.A fascinating and powerful departure for Almodovar, or perhaps more
accurately more an terrific hybrid of the best of his old and new.
This has the darker, more actively perversely disturbing and violent themes
of some of his early work like 'Matador' but shot and directed with the
far smoother and more mature hand he has developed over the years. It
also uses the more complex and fractured time structure style of
Almodovar's more recent work, to great effect.
In the end it's a gorgeous looking, philosophically complex mystery and
horror film. Although not gory, this is a disturbing work, both on a
literal story level, and also for the questions it raises about sexual and personal
identity, love, sado-masochism, and passion run amok.
These themes are all Almodovar touchstones, but delivered here with a
visually stunning icy touch, and with much more complete logic than in
his early works, which often felt less fully thought through, and had
more frustrating plot holes and character leaps.
Not a 'scary' film, but a creepy, moody and highly effective one. A
dark fairy tale as told by, say Stanley Kubrick.
It's good to see Antonio Banderas reunited with Almodovar, and he
delivers a wonderfully complex and quirky modern day Dr. Frankenstein.
Less emotional than my two very favorite Almodovar films (Talk to Her,
All About My Mother), but its exciting to see this extremely talented
film maker continue to evolve and grow, and I think this represents
work that can stand among his best.
Buy The Skin I Live in (Two-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo) (2011) Now
I was telling a friend last night that there is no way you could adequately describe a plot of a Pedro Almodovar film. They are so over the top, so larger than life, so filled with twists and turns. There is always some sort of car chase or people escaping the scene of the crime on a moped. There is always a lot of drama. There are always many quirky characters in this case a mad scientist and a man running around in a tiger costume and cowboy boots. You have to enter a very surreal, crazy world in order to enjoy a Pedro Almodovar film. All of that said, I love his films and they bring me great joy. I told that same friend that I love Pedro Almodovar films as much as I love the idea of him. He is truly an icon in the world of film. When I read the first review of this film by Roger Ebert, he was also reviewing the film Mission Impossible 4. In a film world where almost everything is a sequel or of a certain genre, the world of Pedro Almodovar is unique and refreshing. He is truly an original someone who has a very unique identity and a strong sense of self. I don't want to get into any plot specifics because it would ruin the drama for you. However, if you "get" his film, if you are willing to open yourself up to his world, then The Skin I Live In is a treat indeed.Update May 7, 2012
I just got back from my second trip to Spain. Spain has changed a lot in the last few decades. A very conservative Catholic country that never went through the Protestant Reformation, Spain was under the control of the Church for decades, and then endured decades of rigidity and repression under the military regime of General Francisco Franco. To understand Pedro Almodovar and his world, you need to understand a little about the country of Spain from which he comes. Now, only about 20 percent of the people of Spain consider themselves practicing Catholics this from the country that gave us the Spanish inquisition. Secularism is the reality of Spain right now, and The Skin I live In and the rest of Pedro Almodovar's films come from the creativity and breaking down of barriers and stereotypes that have burst on the scene in Spain in recent years.
Read Best Reviews of The Skin I Live in (Two-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo) (2011) Here
**NOTE** Beware reviewers here who reveal major spoilers because they didn't like the film. Full appreciation of this film requires knowing next to nothing about it going in.Don't let the awful trailer dissuade you: Almodovar delivers the best film of 2011, and more than makes up for the disappointing BROKEN EMBRACES. This is absolutely masterful filmmaking, with career best performances from Banderas and Elena Anaya, an incredible score, and the most shocking twist cinema has seen since the early 90s.
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Every now and then a film comes and introduces to the audience an entirely new unheard of concept. The Skin I Live is a film with a unique plot, very well dramatized, high intensity story, some super acting and ended making me wish there were maybe three of four minutes more to it.Of whatever little I have seen of Antonio Banderas, this is his best film.
The director Pedro Almodvar has made some outrageous films. Let's talk "All about my mother" , "Volver" , "Broken Embraces" , "Talk to her" were made with such a heavy unforgiving sincerity. His work, I dare add is no less than a great book or a great painting which lasts for years it is art. Of these films, All About My Mother was the most poignant one but imagine this I think the director may just have raised the bar a little with "The Skin I Live In"
A real treat and easily among my top 5 films of 2011. The makers of the film deserve all the academy awards they can get but I won't be surprised if this is overlooked as it doesn't have a political message but there is a wondrous world this director manages to create within his films and for the love of that, this film deserves to be watched. The Skin I Live In stands alone, I have never seen anything like it. It will disturb you, rot your mind but in the end, own your vote of confidence.
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