Great performances and a smart decision to avoid melodrama make Skin worth seeing but it's the small things that hold it back from being truly great.
Skin (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:47
Fresh:41
Rotten:6
Average Rating:6.8/10
Consensus: Sophie Okonedo, Sam Neill, and Alice Krige do wonderful work in Skin, delivering performances whose strength is underlined by the incredible real-life events upon which the movie is based.
Synopsis:
Skinis the astonishing true story of Sandra Laing (Sophie Okonedo (Hotel Rwanda/The Secret Life of Bees) & young Ella Ramangwane), a black child born in 1950s South Africa to white Afrikaners (Sam...
Skinis the astonishing true story of Sandra Laing (Sophie Okonedo (Hotel Rwanda/The Secret Life of Bees) & young Ella Ramangwane), a black child born in 1950s South Africa to white Afrikaners (Sam Neill (The Tudors/Jurassic Park) & Alice Krige (Chariots of Fire/Star Trek: First Contact), unaware of their black ancestry. Rural shopkeepers serving the local black community, Sandra’s parents lovingly bring her up as their ‘white’ little girl. At the age of 10, Sandra is sent to an all-white boarding school and confronts the full force of the country's legalized system of racism when she is reclassified by the government as black and expelled from the school. Her parents fight for her to regain white privilege, taking the case all the way to the Supreme Court - and effecting a change in the law, so that she becomes officially white again. But by the time she is a teenager, Sandra knows she will never be accepted by the white community. She falls in love with Petrus, (Tony Kgoroge - Blood Diamond/Hotel Rwanda), a black vegetable seller, and they elope together. Furious and broken-hearted, Sandra's father disowns her. Now she must live her life, for the first time, as a black woman in South Africa. Discovering a new culture and community brings confusion but also joy for Sandra while she still yearns for reunion with her family.
Skin tells a fascinating story of betrayal and triumph with grace and simplicity raising the question of whether the labels “black” and “white” have any real meaning beyond that which society imposes. Sandra’s determined fight for her basic freedoms and her parents’ love is identifiable for all thanks to a radiant performance by Sophie Okonedo. Alice Krige, born and raised in Apartheid South Africa, is unforgettable as the mother torn between her husband’s rage and her daughter’s needs. Sam Neal provides another strong, empathic performance as the troubled head of the household. --© Jour de Fette Films
Starring: Sophie Okonedo, Sam Neill, Alice Krige
Starring: Sophie Okonedo, Sam Neill, Alice Krige
Director: Anthony Fabian
Director: Anthony Fabian
Screenwriter: Helen Crawley
Story: Anthony Fabian
Studio: Jour De Fete Films
Reviews for Skin
Given the subject matter, I wish there were more outrage and passion in Skin, which plods from one huge event to another.
It feels hurried, looks cheap, and works overtime to simplify a complex, flawed character into a noble, tragic heroine. The film speaks fluent cliché.
This great film by Anthony Fabian tells this story through the eyes of a happy girl who grows into an outsider.
A powerful fact-based parable illustrating exactly how irrational and cruel racial bigotry is.
What takes that story of heartbreak and makes it ultimately heartwarming is that Sandra's story, much like the history of apartheid itself, doesn't end there.
By the end, the incredulity stems not from the fact that this happened but that the wider world didn't know about it before now.
Director Anthony Fabian lets the story sell itself, and it does so partly on the strength of the lead performance by Sophie Okonedo.
Skin is a moving and smartly made account of a truly peculiar episode from the period of apartheid that existed as national policy in South Africa until just 15 years ago.
As told by director Anthony Fabian, Skin is both exasperatingly choppy and exceptionally moving.
A powerful story. However, there were no DNA tests in 1955. I have never heard of a 'genetic abnormality' creating a child who looks distinctly black -- Maury Povich would probably say, 'You are not the father!'
A frightening primer on how untreated racism can lead someone to abandon, even hate their own offspring.
A powerful and poignant drama set in South Africa about the toxins of racial hatred and the terrible after-effects of the dangerous and destructive passion of zeal.
This unadorned but affecting drama about Sandra Laing, who attracted media attention in the 1950s when her white parents fought the South African system, suffers from a one-note script, but still does right by its tricky subject.
On-location authenticity lifts poignant debut feature out of pathos and melodrama for a sobering lesson about racism and the dystopian reality of apartheid.
The direction is never more than conventional, with a tear-inducing finale better suited to a TV soap opera.
In a day when it's difficult to say something new about the racial divide, Sandy's story has a poignant power as it underscores just how deeply the fissures run even when it's all in the family.
We don’t need overwrought performances to understand the calamity of her life or to weep when her parents turn their backs on her. If anything, the story demands restraint because, invariably at the movies, it’s the gentle touch that hits harder.
Latest News for Skin
October 31, 2009:
Apartheid poses problem for white couple with black baby. ![]()
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October 29, 2009:
Critics Consensus: This Is It Is Certified Fresh
This week at the movies brings only one wide release: the hotly-anticipated performance documentary Michael Jackson's This Is It, which captures the King of Pop in rehearsals... More...
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