Product Details
Mysterious Skin (Deluxe Unrated Director's Edition)

Mysterious Skin (Deluxe Unrated Director's Edition)
Directed by Gregg Araki

List Price: $24.99
Price: $20.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

18 new or used available from $12.95

Average customer review:

Product Description

Studio: Strand Releasing Release Date: 03/24/2006 Rating: Nr


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #8398 in DVD
  • Released on: 2006-03-20
  • Rating: NC-17
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, Director's Cut, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 90 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Though the subject matter of Mysterious Skin is as sensational as that of Gregg Araki's other films (such as Totally F***ked Up, The Doom Generation, or The Living End), his direction is richer and more multilayered than ever before. Two Kansas teenagers named Neil (Joseph Gordon-Levitt, 10 Things I Hate About You) and Brian (Brady Corbett, Thirteen) share a childhood trauma--but their responses are radically different: Neil hustles tricks, while Brady, who can't remember what happened, believes he was abducted by aliens and left with "missing time." As both try to make sense of their lives and Brian struggles to find out the truth, Mysterious Skin builds to an emotional pitch that some viewers will find uncomfortable and others will find liberating. The characters of Neil and Brian have a fullness that lifts Mysterious Skin above most examinations of sexual abuse and trauma. Gordon-Levitt has been deservedly praised by the critics, but the entire cast--which also includes Bill Sage (Simple Men), Elizabeth Shue (Leaving Las Vegas), Michelle Trachtenberg (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), and Mary Lynn Rajskub (24)--turns in superb performances. A striking and powerful movie. --Bret Fetzer

From The New Yorker
The director Gregg Araki's film, based on the sensational (in every sense of the word) novel by Scott Heim, retains the lo-fi road-movie atmosphere of his previous works ("The Living End," "The Doom Generation"), but there's a heartening maturity this time around. The story concerns an adolescent hustler (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), who's haunted by child abuse, and his former Little League teammate (Brady Corbet), who's attempting to find an answer to the amnesia he suffers when trying to recall a past incident. The actors capture the sad yearning of the characters, and Michelle Trachtenberg and Elisabeth Shue give strong supporting performances. Although this is Araki's best work, the film is finally too dreamy to dramatize the urgent storytelling of the novel. It drifts with an on-the-road aimlessness, losing its initial sexy, dark power. -Bruce Diones
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker


Customer Reviews

Powerful, Great Film4
"Mysterious Skin", directed by Gregg Araki, based on a book by Scott Heim, is a very powerful, well-made film with two very good central performances. However, it is a film not everyone will like or be able to sit through.

Brian (Brady Corbet), a bookish young man who has just started to go to Hutchison Community College, is convinced that he was abducted by Aliens one night eleven years ago. On that night, five hours disappeared from his life after his little league game and he woke up in the cellar of his house with a bleeding nose. Neil (Joseph Gordon Levitt) is very aware, very early, that he is gay and at fifteen becomes a hustler, meeting johns in a local city park in Hutchison. When he turns nineteen, he travels to New York to stay with his best friend, Wendy (Michelle Trachtenberg) and starts to turn tricks there. Just as Neil leaves, Brian realizes that they may have a connection, a connection to the night where he lost five hours of his life.

"Mysterious Skin", adapted from the book and directed by Araki, deals with some very adult issues. If you do the math, you'll realize that the important night that effected both of their lives happened when they were eight years old and, without revealing too much of the story, the events were of a sexual nature. Throughout Neil's life, sex is a major factor; sex is pretty much what he is. Because of these story elements, there are sexual encounters presented in the film. But Araki presents these in such a way that they are dramatic points in the story. They are clearly not meant to titillate, they are about as unarousing as watching a married couple drink coffee and read separate sections of the newspaper, but meant to illustrate points in a dramatic story, as a way to inform. During the sexual encounters, the point of view switches, almost exclusively to that of Neil or Brian. We only see the other participant when they might be seen by Neil or Brian, to see what is happening to them. The sexual acts are not pornographic, but suggestive enough that you will get the whole picture, from watching the images presented. This extremely effective method of presenting these sexual acts allows us to see how they change the two young men throughout their life.

Joseph Gordon - Levitt (TV's "Third Rock from the Sun") plays Neil and here is no way we could have ever guessed that he was capable of creating such a believable, indelible character. There is quite a bit of voiceover, particularly in the beginning scenes, when the two boys are eight, as each is relating the events of that summer. As we listen to Neil, there is emptiness in his voice, a harshness which seems real. As we learn more about Neil and watch him interact with others, this becomes all the more resonant. He is this person. Watching him, we completely "get" who he is, what he is, how he became that. His interactions with his mother (Elisabeth Shue) are also very believable. They are more like friends, showing us the absence of a strong paternal figure in his life. She is more interested in living her own life, having fun, meeting new boyfriends, too busy to be that concerned about her son, needing him when she is feeling down. She doesn't want him to be upset with her. And he loves her for her camaraderie. Because there is a lack of parental involvement, he runs around, finding johns, hanging out with friends, coming in at all hours. It is a powerful performance, utterly believable.

Neil's relationship with Wendy is also mesmerizing. Wendy meets Neil at an early age and they stick together throughout their lives, becoming his best friend, confidant and critic. She loves him, but recognizes his faults, and tries to protect others from becoming hurt. Michelle Trachtenberg does a great job of making this character come to life.

Brady Corbert is equally memorable as Brian. The flip side of Neil, Brian is quiet, introspective, possessed with finding out what happened on that night. This one night has essentially shaped his entire life. He doesn't seem to have many friends, because he is confused. He lives with his mother (Lisa Long), a slightly more modern suburbanite. She is the sole bread winner in the family after her husband (Chris Mulkey) leaves, but also willing to say things like "Let's hold off on talking about that until we have a piece of Peanut Butter Peach Pie that I made." As he travels closer to understanding, he suspects that he was abducted by aliens and finds a kindred spirit in Avalyn (Mary Lynn Rajskub, TV's "24"), the subject of a television show about alien abduction. What all of these elements do is paint a convincing, accurate picture of a confused teenager. As he reaches the conclusion about those missing five hours, we get a sense that he may have suspected the truth all along, he simply needed confirmation. The final scene, in which he learns the truth, is extremely powerful and convincing.

The performances are both great and can be excused of a couple of overly theatrical moments; both characters have at least one instance where they suddenly burst out shouting.

Araki has fashioned such a believable world, an environment in which all of these events could, and probably do happen. It is a powerful, moving, very effective film with some sequences that are very sexually suggestive.

"Mysterious Skin" is a film that will stay with me for a long time.

The Favorite5
The devastating, far-reaching effects of child abuse are microscopically examined in Gregg Araki's sensitive, well-produced and beautifully acted "Mysterious Skin."
Araki has been making films for a number of years and his previous efforts ("The Living End," "The Doom Generation" to name a couple) have been high on style but short on technical finesse. But with "Mysterious Skin," Araki comes into his own artistically: the film is a dynamo of expressive, persuasive acting and top shelf production values. Gone is the jerky, amateurish camera work and editing but remaining is Araki's sensitive worldview and just out-of-kilter morality.
There is no doubt here in which court Araki's allegiance and sympathy lays but he's enough of an artist and straight-shooter to show us both sides of this story: child molester Coach (Bill Sage) is presented, not as a monster (i.e. John Harrigan in a similarly themed "L.I.E") but as a nice guy. Despite the morally corrupt nature of his deeds,I found myself liking Coach.And this in a nutshell is the genius of this film and in Araki's now well-honed talent. Araki is taking big chances in his choice to go there with Coach but it is a brave and honest, though in many ways reckless, choice nonetheless.
John Gordon Levitt makes a major splash in this film. His Neil is morally lazy and a slacker and time and time again, he sets himself up as an emotional target to be used and abused by older men. He recalls his "times" with Coach fondly: "I was his favorite," he pathetically says several times in this film. Levitt's Neil is unable to make any kind of sincere connection with anyone: the blank, emotionally vacant look on his face when he is offered non-sexual tenderness is chilling and terrifying: he is a robot, stripped of all his feelings, able to only respond to and recognize the sexual. However misguided, Neil is on a continual search to find the warmth and caring he felt with Coach, his touchstone.
But when another of Coach's victims, Brian (Brady Corbet) comes to Neil looking for answers, Neil recognizes him as a comrade, his facade collapses and Neil patiently and kindly tells Brian all he wants to know.
"Mysterious Skin" is likely to offend a lot of people what with it's human and kind portrayal of an abuser but Araki cannot be faulted for presenting the whole story: he shows us, let's remember...he does not tell us. He leaves it to us to draw our own conclusions.

One of the very best films of 2005.5
I read Scott Heim's novel "Mysterious Skin" a number of years ago, and found it powerful and challenging. When I learned that Gregg Araki was making a film based on the book, I was apprehensive. "Msterious Skin" deals with the long lasting effects of child abuse. The last thing one wants when approaching this subject from an artistic stand point, is to be in any way exploitive. The good news is that Mr. Araki's has triumphed - his is a brilliant film. The performances throughout are outstanding - especially that of Joseph Gordon-Levitt as an in-your-face gay teen who uses sex as a means to an end - whether hustling or simply giving it away. Brady Corbet delivers in the quieter role of Brian, who has so effectively blocked the memory of his abuse that he has come to believe that he may have been a victim of alien abduction.

This is a tough little film, dealing with topics that most people shy away from - child sexual molestation, drug abuse, prostitution and homosexuality. Araki doesn't flinch or shy away from any of them. It is a testsment to his incredible talent that he has made a film from this material which is both palatable and compelling.