Director: Gregg Araki
Stars: Brady Corbet, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Elisabeth Shue, Chase Ellison
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, Rovi
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