Mysterious Skin | Little White Lies

Mys­te­ri­ous Skin

19 May 2005 / Released: 20 May 2005

Two people, a man and a woman, sitting close together and looking intently at each other.
Two people, a man and a woman, sitting close together and looking intently at each other.
1

Anticipation.

If it’s exploding heads and dildo jokes you’re after. No.

3

Enjoyment.

Although visually stunning, the acting oscillated too quickly between melodrama and ham, ham, ham.

3

In Retrospect.

Way above average, but slightly marred by a Joseph Levitt’s love-it-or-hate-it performance. Read the book: It’s awesome.

Gregg Ara­ki has aban­doned his rough-around-the-edges exploita­tion style in favour of the dream-like tex­tures of David Lynch.

Lit­tle League base­ball coach­es: You can’t live with em and you can’t live with­out em. After five stormy years in adap­ta­tion pur­ga­to­ry, direc­tor Gregg Ara­ki final­ly got it togeth­er to write a screen­play for Scott Heim’s nov­el, Mys­te­ri­ous Skin’.

Ara­ki claims that it is the first and last time a book has ever received his tears upon its dust jack­et. Such melo­dra­mat­ic whim­sy is fit­ting of a film that takes the extreme themes of pae­dophil­ia, rape and abduc­tion in small town Amer­i­ca and sprin­kles them grace­ful­ly over its char­ac­ters like… tears on a dust jacket?

Queer auteur Ara­ki is not a direc­tor known for his sub­tle­ty. Pre­vi­ous films The Doom Gen­er­a­tion and Total­ly F**ked Up were cin­e­mat­ic nihilism gone hay­wire, their sole pur­pose being to shock and dis­turb with Araki’s own voice front and cen­tre. With Mys­te­ri­ous Skin, Ara­ki has tak­en a step back. He’s final­ly stopped say­ing fuck you’ to soci­ety and has decid­ed to con­cen­trate on how soci­ety is say­ing fuck you’ to itself.

Mys­te­ri­ous Skin is a gay psy­cho dra­ma revolv­ing around the lives of two boys who meet at base­ball prac­tice at the age of eight. Swept aside by his hazi­ly ambiva­lent moth­er (Eliz­a­beth Shue) Neil McCor­ma­ck (Joseph Gor­don-Levitt) is raped by his base­ball coach, lead­ing to him to adopt the lifestyle of a gay hus­tler. Bri­an (Brady Cor­bet) is a dork, decked out in over­sized wire-framed glass­es and obsessed by the idea that he was abduct­ed by aliens. Both boys are on a quest to study their past and release pent-up emo­tions they are only begin­ning to develop.

The per­for­mances are good, but not great. And for a film based on such a dar­ing con­ceit, the per­for­mances real­ly need­ed to be great. Grant­ed, the major dra­mat­ic scenes, espe­cial­ly the finale, are com­mand­ing­ly act­ed and expert­ly paced. It’s the small, black com­ic cut-aways that fall flat; the straight-to-cam­era rhetor­i­cal ques­tions and open-end­ed sen­tences that Wes Ander­son and Todd Solondz do so well. In fact, the entire com­ic ele­ment of the film is slight­ly ill-con­ceived. In a scene where Neil picks up a rau­cous busi­ness­man who wants to get the most from his buck, it’s real­ly a joke that only the rent-boys in the audi­ence will be laugh­ing at.

The film con­tains scenes of pae­dophil­ia which are pre­sent­ed with such dreamy ele­gance, you are left uncer­tain as to what is actu­al­ly hap­pen­ing on the screen (and they’re all the more haunt­ing for it). Ara­ki has aban­doned the rough-around-the-edges exploita­tion style in which he usu­al­ly shoots his films in order to give Mys­te­ri­ous Skin the dream-like tex­tures and iron­ic jux­ta­po­si­tions of David Lynch (Neil pour­ing Froot Loops over his head in super slow motion as a metaphor for his rape being the best exam­ple). All this cou­pled with the melan­choly (and bril­liant) sound­track sup­plied by Cocteau Twins main­stay, Robin Guthrie, makes our sym­pa­thy for the sad lives these char­ac­ters lead skyrocket.

Com­par­isons will be made with Todd Solondz’s forth­com­ing (and sim­i­lar­ly dis­turb­ing) Palin­dromes which uses child actors to present very sen­si­tive ideas on screen. Both films high­light how dif­fi­cult it is to get right’ a char­ac­ter who has been sub­ject to a pae­dophil­ia. With Mys­te­ri­ous Skin the ideas are buried in the character’s emo­tions so deeply, that it is some­times dif­fi­cult to under­stand the motives behind their rea­son­ing. For all its extrav­a­gant sto­ry­telling, you’re just not there with them. You sym­pa­thise with them, but you don’t like them.

Mys­te­ri­ous Skin’s tone shifts uneasi­ly from the self-con­scious­ly sub­tle (the ini­tial encounter’ with coach) to bla­tant emo­tion­al sign­post­ing (the final break­down). Neil’s nev­er-end­ing bar­rage of lech­er­ous clients seem to force the idea of the diver­si­ty of sex­u­al­i­ty onto the audi­ence. From his ini­tial encounter with a bald­ing snack sales­man, you’re count­ing down the tricks until cocky Neil has his face smashed in with a spanner.

Although Brian’s search for aliens is fun­ny in it’s benign strait­faced­ness, the final twist will come as no sur­prise with an ounce of com­mon sense. It’s a well exe­cut­ed film that isn’t entire­ly con­vinc­ing. By the final reel, you’re mere­ly left wait­ing for things to fall into place. If noth­ing else, it’s serves as a good argu­ment to why we don’t play base­ball in Britain.

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