Skin Movie Review
Skin Review

"Skin" Overview

Rating: 12
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Anthony FabianProducer : Anthony Fabian, Genevieve Hofmeyr, Margaret Matheson
Screenwiter : Helen Crawley, Jessie Keyt, Helena Kriel
Starring : Sophie Okonedo,Sam Neill,Alice Krige,Tony Kgoroge,Ella Ramangwane,Hannes Brummer,Faniswa Yisa,Nomhle Nkyonyeni
Based on a true story, his powerful drama tells an important story from
Apartheid-era South Africa with honesty and real sensitivity. And the cast
makes it thoroughly gripping by never playing it safe.
In 1965, the Laing family is caught in a loophole of the 1950 law prohibiting
South Africans from living or studying with people of another racial group. The
problem is that Sandra (Ramangwane then Okonedo) looks more black than her
white parents Abraham and Sannie (Neill and Krige). Treated horribly by
teachers in her all-white school and abused by strangers, The Laings go to
court to officially classify Sandra as white. But this has repercussions when
she falls in love with a black man (Kgoroge) and can't legally live with her
husband or children.
This is an extremely complex story about identity, looking at a woman caught
between two groups in a harshly divided society. By focussing so tightly on the
characters, the film is able to make vital points without ever preaching.
Sandra naturally identifies more with the blacks, perhaps because they don't
ooze with hatred toward her, which puts her at odds with her parents,
especially Abraham. And his intractability adds another powerful layer to the
film, as Sannie's loyalty to her husband conflicts horribly with her motherly
instincts.
As a result, Krige has the film's most involving role, and she plays it with a
delicate restraint that simply breaks our heart. Right to the bitter end, as
South Africa's first free elections are held in 1994, Krige brings a remarkably
raw dignity to her performance. Meanwhile, Okonedo plays Sandra with an inner
fire that's both subtle and insistent. She also finds strong chemistry with
Kgoroge which, as it develops into something much darker, makes the film even
more provocative. And Neill bravely takes on the most unlikeable character
without blinking.
Director Fabian fills the frame with telling details, such as Abraham quietly
refusing to touch cash paid by black customers in his shop. This silent racism
is as devastating as the more horrific events that come later. And these
touches helps the film get deep beneath the surface of Apartheid, exploring
attitudes of superiority that fuelled what the whites felt was a warranted
prejudice. Seen today, this everyday cruelty and oppression is both inhuman and
indefensible. And not as uncommon as we'd like to think.
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Review by Rich Cline
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