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Mysterious Skin

  • 2004
  • Unrated
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
82K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,679
158
Chase Ellison and Joseph Gordon-Levitt in Mysterious Skin (2004)
Theatrical Trailer from TLA Releasing
Play trailer1:53
8 Videos
99+ Photos
Coming-of-AgePsychological DramaDrama

Two pre-adolescent boys both experienced a strange event and later it affects their lives in different ways. One becomes a reckless, sexually adventurous prostitute, while the other retreats... Read allTwo pre-adolescent boys both experienced a strange event and later it affects their lives in different ways. One becomes a reckless, sexually adventurous prostitute, while the other retreats into a reclusive fantasy of alien abduction.Two pre-adolescent boys both experienced a strange event and later it affects their lives in different ways. One becomes a reckless, sexually adventurous prostitute, while the other retreats into a reclusive fantasy of alien abduction.

  • Director
    • Gregg Araki
  • Writers
    • Gregg Araki
    • Scott Heim
  • Stars
    • Brady Corbet
    • Joseph Gordon-Levitt
    • Elisabeth Shue
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    82K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,679
    158
    • Director
      • Gregg Araki
    • Writers
      • Gregg Araki
      • Scott Heim
    • Stars
      • Brady Corbet
      • Joseph Gordon-Levitt
      • Elisabeth Shue
    • 289User reviews
    • 151Critic reviews
    • 74Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 9 nominations total

    Videos8

    Mysterious Skin
    Trailer 1:53
    Mysterious Skin
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 1
    Clip 1:40
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 1
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 1
    Clip 1:40
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 1
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 3
    Clip 2:00
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 3
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 4
    Clip 1:32
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 4
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 5
    Clip 1:14
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 5
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 6
    Clip 2:11
    Mysterious Skin Scene: Scene 6

    Photos130

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    Top cast31

    Edit
    Brady Corbet
    Brady Corbet
    • Brian
    Joseph Gordon-Levitt
    Joseph Gordon-Levitt
    • Neil
    Elisabeth Shue
    Elisabeth Shue
    • Mrs. McCormick
    Chase Ellison
    Chase Ellison
    • Neil - Age 8
    George Webster
    George Webster
    • Brian - Age 8
    Rachael Nastassja Kraft
    • Deborah - Age 12
    • (as Rachael Kraft)
    Lisa Long
    Lisa Long
    • Mrs. Lackey
    Chris Mulkey
    Chris Mulkey
    • Mr. Lackey
    David Lee Smith
    David Lee Smith
    • Alfred
    Bill Sage
    Bill Sage
    • Coach
    Riley McGuire
    • Wendy - Age 11
    Ryan Stenzel
    • Stephen Zepherelli
    Richard Riehle
    Richard Riehle
    • Charlie
    Michelle Trachtenberg
    Michelle Trachtenberg
    • Wendy
    Larry Marko
    • Old Man with Scar
    Mary Lynn Rajskub
    Mary Lynn Rajskub
    • Avalyn Friesen
    Clover
    • Patches
    Jeffrey Licon
    Jeffrey Licon
    • Eric
    • (as Jeff Licon)
    • Director
      • Gregg Araki
    • Writers
      • Gregg Araki
      • Scott Heim
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews289

    7.682.3K
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    Featured reviews

    9robkillian

    Powerful, Disturbing, Brave--Hat's off to Greg Araki, the cast and Scott Heim

    Just got back from the Sundance Film Festival. I am still processing this powerful movie and the stunning reminder of the cost some of life's choices bring to our lives. I was amazed at the brutal honesty of this story. While I cannot say enough about the acting, Brady Corbet's subtle portrayal of Brian should be honored and remembered for a very long time. Bravo to all involved with this movie.

    Before seeing this movie I could only remember that the novel, Mysterious Skin, had been disturbing. Greg Araki has made this novel into something that cuts emotionally but could also have a great impact in how people learn to deal with a painful past and the defenses they have built up to protect potentially devastating secrets.

    Anyone who wants a movie to move them, to make them feel and to think should do everything they can to make sure they do not miss Mysterious Skin
    9TennisW61-1

    Elegant Rawness

    MYSTERIOUS SKIN – REVIEW 7/6/05

    In his new film Greg Araki uses a prudent ploy to snag and reel you in: having the visuals effusively speak and the screenplay divulge the least amount of information necessary to keep the story evolving. Words can only reveal so much, while Araki's images display an almost unbearable amount of visceral material, exploiting vibrant color, alluring texture, dark and light, the brooding and harrowing eyes of Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and the handsome modesty of Brady Corbet.

    The film resonates on a level of rawness unseen and unfelt since Cuesta's "L.I.E." or Solondz's "Storytelling." The film is jarringly penetrative and pervasive: the visuals in your mind play over repeatedly and the disconcerting but intellectually uplifting feeling "Mysterious Skin" infuses lies active long after you leave the theater. The film is not easy to digest. Seeing that there is pervasive sexual exposure between adults, as well as between adults and kids (though discreetly handled), this film will repulse many viewers. This film also had to be made.

    Neil (Gordon-Levitt) and Brian's (Corbet) story starts in the early 1980s when they are only eight-years-old. Neil's little league baseball coach initiates a sexual relationship, of which (most likely to the consternation of several audience members) Neil actually recounts a rosy-colored remembrance: he enjoyed it. Brian that same year describes how his perpetual and mysterious string of blackouts and bloody noses began one rainy night after a baseball game.

    The story moves forward to when Neil and Brian are at adolescence's conclusion. We discover that Neil has grown up to be both gay and a hustler, while asexual Brian's free time is taken up seeking the source of and resolution to his insoluble physical ailments. Brian soon deduces that aliens abducted him and meets a fellow abductee, Avalyn (Mary Lynn Rajskub), with whom he finds ephemeral solace.

    Neil and Brian's story act in parallel, moving forward and backward over time, but never disjointedly. Neil eventually moves to New York, while his pining friend Eric (Jeff Licon) actually befriends Brian and an endearing friendship ensues. Neil's (unappeasable) pursuit of everlasting male love ends in the most unlikely of places: back home. Brian's pursuit of the truth leads him to, predictably, Neil. Araki exquisitely handles the ending (not divulged here) with the appropriate effusion of tendered emotion by the two main actors (warning: though the film's trailer subtlety gives away the finish).

    I cannot give enough plaudits to the two male leads. A long way from "3rd Rock", Joe's sensuous flirtations and dynamic eyes mate well with Brady's tranquil, naive, yet profound, disposition. Brady's last scene with his character's father, as well as the climax, demonstrates his aptitude and assured longevity as an actor (beyond "Thunderbirds").

    "Mysterious Skin" evidences many matches made-in-heaven: from film and director to material and actor to music and film. The film is entirely amoral, but not immoral. It is also a difficult film to watch. Many will cast it aside as tripe and trash (along with other morally relative films), but those fortunate enough to engage themselves in the movie's discussion will revel in it long after the credits' close.
    10huladog55

    A brave, wide-eyed look at a controversial subject

    I have a feeling that most of the reviewers here have not read the text of "Mysterious Skin" by Scott Heim. Doing so would be most helpful in viewing this film.

    Out of sheer luck, I happened to find a screening in Las Vegas, almost a year after the initial release, having finished the book only one day before. It was an interesting experience from the start.

    One got the feeling of stepping into an adult cinema, instead of a semi-mainstream release. I was surrounded by sprinkling of older guys watching an NC-17 matinée. A first for me, for sure. The movie captures the feel of the book spot on. Director Araki should be commended for staying so close to the text. Hardly anything was left out and what was deleted did not detract from the storyline in the least.

    Heim's novel deals with subject matter that most people would prefer to deny exists. But back here in the real world, it does. On screen we see the sensualization of an 8 year old boy, along with his sexual fantasy. Not for the squeamish, but Araki communicates this brilliantly without diluting the message. Most people would shy away from a story that has an 8 year old boy having an orgasm as he watched his mother have intercourse, but Araki does not. And somehow he makes it okay.

    Hats off to the boys cast as the young Neil and Brian. Chase Ellison captures the emotions of his character very well. He captures the darkness of Neil McCormick incredibly, and translates perfectly from the written page. We sense the confusion turning into acceptance and then, desire. It made me squirm in my seat. George Webster as young Brian is great.

    I can't imagine a lot of actors lining up to play the boylover coach, but Bill Sage does very well. In the story, his role doesn't seem like a pure predator, but clearly he has devices at work. He's in the right place at the right time.

    Joseph Gordon-Levitt is a marvel is this film. There was a genuine quality to his character, an aloofness that comes with knowledge at an early age that is hard to put into words. Brady Corbett successfully brought his youthful character along, and I think his interactions with the other characters is spot on for someone who had had an experience like his.

    Critics will say that this film glorifies pedophilia. I disagree. I think it shows the effects of pedophilic relationship on different people, and how they react to it. It is a slice of life, albeit a very dark one, that does occur each and every day. Approach with caution and an open mind.
    8Galina_movie_fan

    Neil: "I wished with all my heart we could just leave this world behind. Rise like two angels in the night and magically disappear. "

    Mysterious Skin (2004) directed by Gregg Araki is powerful, shocking and absolutely convincing in every detail movie about two teenagers that were deeply affected by the events of one long hot summer of their childhood; events that one of them could not forget and the other desperately tried to remember. Ten years later, their lives could not be more different - Neil (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) has became a gay hustler, cynical, manipulative but charismatic, while Brian (Brady Corbet), nervous and shy believes that he was abducted by the aliens for some strange experiments.

    The film like this requires very good performances from all cast members and it's got them from everybody but Gordon-Levitt is simply the shining star and I'll make sure from now on to check out all his new movies.
    10RackOutOfFocus

    Very strong movie with difficult content

    I had high hopes for this film, since I have been a big fan of the novel on which it is based. The film exceeded my expectations in every way. Although quite faithful to the book (with many lines of dialogue and narration moving straight from Scott Heim's poetic prose), the movie has more drive and focus and pulls you so far into the troubled characters. Credit for the movie's strength goes all around -- director Araki put his mark on the story without taking it over. He got uniformily good performances (and somehow managed to direct scenes that any reader of the book would have thought completely unfilmable). Kansas has never looked better, or more sinister. The music is used well throughout.

    And the acting is terrific. The two youngest leads, Chase Ellison and George Webster, were entirely convincing in their scenes (and I hope they feel proud of their work, seeing as how there's no way they'll get to see this movie until sometime next decade). Michelle Trachtenberg and Jeff Licon have fairly thankless roles, playing characters who are somewhat less clear and crucial in the film than their characters were in the book. But they don't sweat that, they just play what the screen play has them do, and they excel. Licon, especially, I think, although Trachtenberg is at a disadvantage, as her part is really pretty small.

    And for me, at least, I think Mary-Lynn Rajskub, Brady Corbet, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt give about as good performances as one can give. Rajskub is so good that she gives the other actors in the film a space to react that is almost visible. Corbet is quiet and intense; if his performance sometimes lacks motivation, it is probably deliberate, as his character is struggling with identity and memory. And as for Gordon-Levitt, man, that guy can act. I really have a hard time thinking of any acting performance ever that has affected me as much.

    It is a difficult story, although I felt it ends hopefully. Hopefully, you will agree. Content is very strong, although perhaps not NC-17 strong. Not for kids. Adults, if you can get past the 2nd scene, you can get through it, but there is a lot of outlawed sexuality and violence. It is painful to watch at times, but to me at least, that's because the actors and the director managed to immerse me in the characters.

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    Related interests

    Elsie Fisher in Eighth Grade (2018)
    Coming-of-Age
    Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
    Psychological Drama
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Gregg Araki said in an NPR interview that he shot all of the scenes with the child actors in such a way that they did not know the sexual context of their abuse scenes, and only during editing did he make the movie appear to show children being abused or witnessing abuse.
    • Goofs
      There is a Metallica "St. Anger" sticker (with the "St." torn off) on the right rear fender of Eric's Gremlin in 1991. "St. Anger" wasn't released until 2003.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Neil: [narration voice-over] And as we sat there listening to the carolers, I wanted to tell Brian it was over now and everything would be okay. But that was a lie, plus, I couldn't speak anyway. I wish there was some way for us to go back and undo the past. But there wasn't. There was nothing we could do. So I just stayed silent and trying to telepathically communicate how sorry I was about what had happened. And I thought of all the grief and sadness and fucked up suffering in the world, and it made me want to escape. I wished with all my heart that we could just leave this world behind. Rise like two angels in the night and magically... disappear.

    • Crazy credits
      The movie title is displayed at the start of the film (at 0:01:56) spaced out as M-YS-TERIOUS S-K-I-N.
    • Alternate versions
      The 2005 film reviews generally list a 99 minute run-time. The British Board of Film Classification, bbfc.co.uk, rated the uncut 105m 19s film as 18 on 5/20/2005. The 3/20/2006 "Unrated Director's Edition" Strand Releasing DVD has a 104m 59s run-time, but its case lists a 99m length; it is also anamorphic 853x479 pixels format (1.78:1 aspect) but the case lists Letterboxed. The Internet Movie Database technical specifications list a 107 min Sundance Channel Library Print, but on Sundance.com Sundance TV lists a 105 minutes run-time.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: The Lords of Dogtown/Mysterious Skin/Rock School/Batman Begins (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Golden Hair
      Written by Syd Barrett

      Performed by Slowdive

      Courtesy of SINE a division of Sony Music Entertainment (UK) Limited

      Used by permission of BMG Music Publishing International o/b/o Lupus Music Company Ltd.

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 24, 2005 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Netherlands
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Piel misteriosa
    • Filming locations
      • 5500 Atlas St, Los Angeles, California, USA(Trick or Treat house)
    • Production companies
      • Antidote Films (I)
      • Desperate Pictures
      • Fortissimo Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $713,240
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $17,425
      • May 8, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,532,932
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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