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Mysterious Skin
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Directed by Gregg Araki.
Two young men are haunted by similar events from their past, though the effects manifest themselves in very different ways, in this powerful drama from independent filmmaker Gregg Araki. In the summer of 1981, Brian (George Webster) and Neil (Chase Ellison) are both eight years old and playing on the same little league baseball team in a small Kansas town. One day, after a game, Brian blacks out after getting caught in a rainstorm, and five hours later he finds himself sitting in his basement with his nose bleeding and no memory of what happened to him. Over the years, the event -- particularly the missing five hours -- weigh heavily on his mind, and he becomes convinced that he was kidnapped by space aliens. Teenaged Brian (now played by Brady Corbet) becomes friends with Avalyn Friesen (Mary Lynn Rajskub), a woman who claims to have been abducted by aliens on several occasions, and she urges him to look to his dreams for patterns that might suggest what happened to him. Meanwhile, during the same summer, Neil developed a powerful crush on their little league coach (Bill Sage), who appeared to have also taken a shine to Neil. Neil's mother (Elisabeth Shue), seeing nothing wrong with their friendship, lets the coach look after Neil while she's off on one of her many dates, and before long Neil begins sexually experimenting with the older man. Neil's introduction to sex inspires him to become a hustler when he grows into his teens, and after burning his bridges in his hometown, Neil (now played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt) and his close friend Wendy (Michelle Trachtenberg) move to New York, where he continues to cruise for a living but under significantly more risky circumstances. One day, Neil is contacted by Brian, who after seeing one of their team photos from their days in little league suspects he might have some clues as to what happened to him in 1981. Mysterious Skin was based on the novel by Scott Heim, and marked the first time Gregg Araki made a film that did not originate with one of his own screenplays. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Joseph Gordon-Levitt Has a Thin ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"I don’t know why the people at the NY Times‘ Style Magazine shot the above video of Joseph Gordon-Levitt talking about Godard, and Russian clowns, and Guys and Dolls, but after Mysterious Skin, I’ll watch that guy do anything. Well, maybe not anything. Via WOW Report. Originally posted on:SpoutBlog " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog The Micro Five: The Summer Midterm
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Over at Sergio Leone and the Infield Flyball Rule, Dennis Cozzalio has offered the film blog world a 28-question “summer midterm.” As he puts it, “We know that the last thing you really want to do in the summer is to be sitting indoors taking a test. But wouldn’t you rather be doing this than seeing Transformers? I thought so. Now get to work!” I’m not good with long quizzes, so for this week’s installment of The Micro Five, I’ve picked five questions to answer in short essay form. See my answers below, and be sure to check out Dennis’ post to read the 70+ (!) responses. This is pass/fail, right? 1. Describe a famous location from a movie that you have visited (Bodega Bay, California, where the action in The Birds took place, for example). Was it anything like the way it was in the film? Why or why not? When I was 17, I was briefly employed as a hostess at Dupar’s, a been-there-forever diner in Studio City, CA that was used as a location for Boogie Nights. Dupar’s is the setting ... " [More]
analogzombieanalogzombie Mysterious Skin
by analogzombie in analogzombie Blog
loved it.
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"I was talking to friend about it the other night. "Yeah i've seen his movie Nowhere, and that's exactly where that film goes." This sort of sentiment seems par for the course for Gregg Araki. His previous movies, epitmoized by Nowhere and The Doom Generation, are sort of hellish teenage character studies. Movies with unbelievable characters engaged in mundane daily life, in a sureallist punk landscape. Typecast as part of 'the New Queer Cinema' of the early nineties, Araki is often chastised for making films that lack depth. I've always understood this view, but I defend his work as fevered wish fulfillments. Movies whose point isn't in the message, but in the telling. So now he comes out of left field with a real film. An accomplished work that, while containing definite Araki style, is unlike anything he's made before. This is a heartbreaking work of staggering genius, to quote Dave Eggars.Mysterious Skin tells the story of two Kansas youths who are mo ... " [More]
lukasblulukasblu Re: most overrated gay movie
by lukasblu in Queer Cinema
liked it.
"gregg araki films i've seen and liked The Doom Generation, and Mysterious Skin;i am also af fan of james duval and rose mcgowan from doom generation;And i like joseph gordon lewitt from mysterious skinIn the ending of doom generation;i saw amy being tortured and it looked like xavier was dead or dying;I do not understand how both xavier and amy survived without a scratch or the fact that they survived at all;Only jordan did not make it and die??Can you explain to me that ending on your viewpoint?I watched this movie with my nephew and a friend and we were all perplexed with the endingI use to think that james duval was related to robert duvall but they have no blood relations whatsoever;the spellings of their last name is different;james last name has one L and roberts has two L's;And i always thought that james was much younger in age(because of the roles he plays and the way he looks):He's actually 34:this are just trivial things i found out about james recently; Anyway that must ... " [More]
unemployedwaifunemployedwaif Re: most overrated gay movie
by unemployedwaif in Queer Cinema
liked it.
"Gregg Araki is a personal favorite of mine. I own The Living End, Totally F***ed Up, The Doom Generation, Nowhere, and Splendor. I haven't been able to see two of his earlier films; I can't wait until Smiley Face is finally given a theatrical release. And I'm normally not a fan of celebrity culture but I did get a little giddy when I managed to get tickets to the AFI premiere of Mysterious Skin at the Arclight Theater in Los Angeles. The film was great but the best part was after the film when exiting the theater I brushed shoulders with James Duval and nearly had a heart attack. I recommend all of his films whenever someone asks, but most people get turned off by his style of filmmaking and subject matter which tends to be "in-your-face" than most. Mysterious Skin and Splendor seem to be his most approachable (or "Hollywood") films, but I tend to push people towards seeing Nowhere or The Living End. " [More]
lukasblulukasblu Re: suggestions?
by lukasblu in indie films
liked it.
"Any movie by director lars von trier;the ones i have seen and like are Breaking the Waves (1996),Dancer in the Dark (2000), Dogville (2003), Manderlay (2005)(both dogville and manderlay are part of a trilogy ;the third unreleleased one is Wasington (2009)which i would love to see as soon as it is available)these are all dark,drama and tragic.Dear Wendy (2005)is a little bit lighter movie about outcasted teens and their pacifist view on gunshttp://imdb.com/name/nm000 1885/ imdb for lars von trieri do not know if this is indie but it was an under the radar movie that deserves more credit(i think)called The Chumscrubber (2005)it stars billy elliot,same guy on dear wendy,and Undertow (2004)a joem18b recommendationthis one is australian(foreign), so i do not know if it counts, but i loved this movie: Rabbit-Proof Fence (2002)(based on a true story);you did not mention if you like foreignany movie by director greg araki:i saw and liked The Doom Generation (1995) and mysterious skin(2004 ... " [More]
GradysGhostGradysGhost Re: Range of Characters
by GradysGhost in Range of Character
hasn't rated it.
"Concerning Joseph Gordon-Levitt, you should watch Mysterious Skin. My wife and best friend both hated it because it's borderline gay porn, but the message is powerful, and Gordon-Levitt shows even more range.1 - Teenage boy, typecast, stereotypical in 3rd Rock and in 10 Things I Hate About You.2 - Teenage boy, Sam Spade clone, fast-talking, quick-moving, smart detective type in Brick.3 - Emotionally and physically scarred victim of homosexual pedophelia in Mysterious Skin.Joseph Gordon-Levitt, if he can continue to survive the "young actor" stigma, will be a hell of an asset to the future of filmmaking. " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog People at SXSW: Gregg Araki (Sm ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Paul interviews Gregg Araki (Mysterious Skin) after the screening of Smiley Face at SXSW 2007. Hands down, one of the funniest movies of the year. Richard Linklater makes a surprise appearance. Syndicated Feed From:SpoutBlog " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
With its complicated plot, multiple unreliable narrators, and subtle interplay between fantasy and reality, Scott Heim's Mysterious Skin doesn't seem like an easy candidate for cinematic adaptation. But alt-pop auteur Gregg Araki has fashioned the novel into a mournful, lyrical rumination an lost innocence, abandoning only a few nuances along the way. Continuing to erase memories of his embarrassing sitcom past, Joseph Gordon-Levitt completely inhabits the role of Neil McCormick, a gay hustler forever haunted by the purity of his childhood relationship with a handsome baseball coach. Brady Corbet proves equally compelling as Brian Lackey, a UFO-obsessed college student with very different memories of his Little League days. The facts lie somewhere between Neil's hard-nosed cynicism and Brian's damaged flights of fancy. But Araki is more interested in the emotional truth of these boys' experiences -- the way their individual coping mechanisms protect them from a shared past even while endangering their divergent futures. The director's previous films revelled in an overstuffed visual aesthetic, but here, with the help of cinematographer Steve Gainer, he fashions an entire world of forlorn childhood nostalgia and haunted suburban spaces. Araki's casting, impeccable as ever, allows talents as disparate as Elisabeth Shue, Mary Lynn Rajskub, and Michelle Trachtenberg to contribute to his remarkably consistent vision. Audiences put off by the bratty pop excess of Araki's earlier films may not recognize the mature filmmaker of Mysterious Skin. But fans will have glimpsed this film's heartbreak before, beneath the candy-colored surfaces of Nowhere and The Doom Generation. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 



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