OMDB
Home Movies Series Search
OMDB

Built by Torkel Aannestad with Next.js Next.js and shadcn/ui shadcn/ui.

Data provided by TMDB.

GitHubSource code
The Skin I Live In
The Skin I Live In

The Skin I Live In (2011)

75% User Rating
2h 0min
Drama
Horror
Mystery
Thriller

A brilliant plastic surgeon creates a synthetic skin that withstands any kind of damage. His guinea pig: a mysterious and volatile woman who holds the key to his obsession.

Pedro AlmodóvarDirector

Cast

View Cast & Crew
Antonio Banderas

Antonio Banderas

Dr. Robert Ledgard

Elena Anaya

Elena Anaya

Vera Cruz / Gal

Marisa Paredes

Marisa Paredes

Marilia

Jan Cornet

Jan Cornet

Vicente

Roberto Álamo

Roberto Álamo

Zeca

Eduard Fernández

Eduard Fernández

Fulgencio

José Luis Gómez

José Luis Gómez

President of the Institute of Biotechnology

Blanca Suárez

Blanca Suárez

Norma Ledgard

Susi Sánchez

Susi Sánchez

Vicente's mother

Bárbara Lennie

Bárbara Lennie

Cristina

Fernando Cayo

Fernando Cayo

Surgeon

Chema Ruiz

Chema Ruiz

Police officer

The Movie Database

Buika

Singer

Ana Mena

Ana Mena

Young Norma

The Movie Database

Teresa Manresa

Casilda Efraiz

Agustín Almodóvar

Agustín Almodóvar

Agustín

The Movie Database

Miguel Almodóvar

Agustín's son

The Movie Database

Marta R. Mahou

Yoga teacher on TV

Esther García

Esther García

Presenter (uncredited)

The Movie Database

Yolanda Brown

Conference participant

Reviews (2)

All Reviews
Filipe Manuel Neto
Filipe Manuel Neto
Rating 60%

May 27, 2023

**The film is good: it's tense, it's intense, it's shocking, it's dramatic, it's engaging... but it's also brutal and quite illogical if we think about the details.** As far as I remember, this was the first Pedro Almodóvar film I saw, and it was up to my expectations. I heard that he was a very visual director, that he wasn't afraid to show ugly things as they are, with realism and authenticity, and that he sometimes brought us complicated, ambitious stories. This movie is all of those. Honestly, even though it's not a kind of cinema that I particularly like (and I don't think I'm the only one who sometimes feels uncomfortable when realism and rawness are taken to the limit), I liked what I saw. However, there are several flaws, mainly in the story told. I'll talk about that later. To make this film, Almodóvar called a very competent cast of Spanish actors, and it is really necessary for us to recognize that Spanish cinema is going through a very good phase, with a lot of quality and very talented people. Although we are used to seeing him making American films, Antonio Banderas is Spanish, and it's great to see him here, speaking in his mother tongue. He knows how to give his character a darkly restrained, cold, calculating and slightly psychotic look. Elena Anaya also leaves us with a very satisfactory work, even considering that she doesn't have the material and time for more. Jan Cornet and Marisa Paredes, in a frankly secondary position, provide adequate support to their colleagues. On a technical level, the film also has some interesting points. Filmed mostly in the Galician region, a short distance from Portugal, it is not a tourist postcard, we are barely able to recognize the locations (I didn't). But this is secondary! The locations are good and well used, the sets are very good (especially the operating room, with all the medical apparatus and a very modern look) and the cinematography is really remarkable. Cleverly edited, it's well paced and time passes without we're noticing. The screenplay is inspired by written material, but has been so overhauled by the director that it doesn't have much connection with the original source. It's something new, even if we can understand or guess where the inspiration for some details came from. We follow the saga of a surgeon, specializing in plastic and reconstructive surgery, to create synthetic skin that he can apply to burned or injured people. Of course, this stems from trauma – he lost his wife in a burning car, and more recently lost a daughter, who committed suicide. What happens is that, at a certain point, he starts to make increasingly morally questionable experiments, going so far as to kidnap a person. I don't want to say too much, the film has many twists and turns that make the script more complicated than usual, but I won't be being honest if I don't say that there are many details and twists that have no logic at all. They simply do not make sense, starting with the creation of synthetic skin: the reconstruction of a burned face is a medical problem that is still far from being solved, but everyone knows that the skin is a human organ that regenerates itself, under the conditions and right time. It may never be the same as it was. And I can't see how all of this is connected with any hypothetical sex change (I won't say more, watch the film... but knowing that it's a very grotesque story, so get the kids and grandparents out of the room).

Media

View All Media
NYFF Press Conference: The Skin I Live In

NYFF Press Conference: The Skin I Live In

Official US Trailer

Official US Trailer

Teaser Trailer

Teaser Trailer

UK Premiere Somerset House

UK Premiere Somerset House

UK Trailer

UK Trailer

Recommended

View All Recommended
Volver
I'm So Excited!
Broken Embraces
Bad Education
Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!
All About My Mother
Julieta
Talk to Her
Velvet Goldmine
Delicacy
Fragile
I Spit on Your Grave III: Vengeance Is Mine
We Need to Talk About Kevin
Caché
Headhunters
Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown
Dream House
The Legend of Zorro
Locke
The Son