Santa Cruz Good Times

Thursday
Sep 02nd
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Good Times Home A&E Film Color Bind

Color Bind

film_skin2White parents, black child-chaos, in affecting 'Skin'

Despite its title, the persuasive drama, Skin, is not about race. At least, it's not about race alone. Yes, the plot revolves around the true story of a black South African girl born to white parents during the shameful and divisive apartheid era. But on a larger scale, the issues of identity, otherness and separatism explored here could just as easily apply to a story about national, sexual, political, or religious intolerance, as well as racism—any of the artificial barriers that divide us from our fellow humans. Where Skin gains power is in showing how the effects of injustice can be just as devastating on those who wield it as on those it's wielded against.

The feature debut of director Anthony Fabian (who gets a story credit alongside screenwriters Helen Crawley, Jessie Keyt, and Helena Kriel), Skin dramatizes the true story of Sandra Laing. Played in the film as a child by newcomer Ella Ramangwane, Sandra is a bright, eager girl with a toffee-colored complexion and black, corkscrew curls, even though her parents, Pa (Sam Neill) and Ma (Alice Krige) are white Afrikaners, whose forebears were Dutch colonists. Her parents, who own a provincial post office and dry goods store, love their daughter without reservation, and while Sandra plays with the black children of her parents' employees, she identifies as white—right down to her favorite blonde-haired doll.

But in 1965, when 10-year-old Sandra is sent to her first boarding school, she's surprised that everyone thinks she's black. Her presence is so "disruptive" in the strictly segregated school, she's finally sent home (after a brutal caning for no reason in front of her class). Even more humiliating is the legal campaign her father launches to have her officially "classified" as white (including such scientific methods as testing to see if her hair is kinky enough to support a pencil). While a geneticist causes a mild uproar in court by testifying that virtually all white Dutch Afrikaners possess enough recessive black genes in the bloodline to produce a "colored" child, it's not until a law is passed designating racial classification according to parentage that Sandra becomes legally "white’ again.

Evolving from a carefree child into a shy, wary 18-year-old, Sandra (now played by the luminous Sophie Okonedo) resists her parents' attempts to set her up with a series of white Afrikaner boys who insult (or assault) her without a second thought. Instead, she falls in love with charismatic black vegetable gardener, Petrus (Tony Kgoroge), from a nearby shantytown. Not only is their relationship illegal (because she's "white"), it causes an irredeemable rupture with her volatile Pa that tears her family apart.

Sandra's odyssey to find a place where she belongs is heartrending, as she endures the stereotypes that society (and her own loved ones) continually project onto her. Her relationship with her father is the film's most complex; he genuinely loves her and encourages her with his motto, "Never give up." But while he's determined to fight for her rights, his own identity is so wrapped up in defending his masculinity (against the occasional insulting suggestion that he's not really Sandra's father), and his own privileged whiteness, he finally doesn't care how much suffering he inflicts on Sandra to prove them. Potential tragedy also haunts her relationship with Petrus, whom she can neither legally wed, nor shield from the dehumanizing effects of racism and poverty.

The film occasionally strays into an all-purpose Men-Are-Pigs philosophy, its women constantly manipulated and terrorized by the males in their lives. But film_skinoverall, with its fine performances and subdued intensity, Skin will resonate with anyone who has ever felt like an outsider for reasons entirely beyond his or her control, and who's had cause to know first-hand that separate is never equal.

SKIN ★★★ (out of four)

With Sophie Okonedo, Sam Neill, and Alice Krige. Written by Helen Crawley, Jessie Keyt, and Helena Kriel. Directed by Anthony Fabian. A Jour de Fete release. Rated PG-13. 107 minutes.

Watch movie trailer >>>

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment

busy
 

Movie Times

Movies 8/27–9/2

DEL MAR THEATRE     469–3220
Avatar 3D Special Edition  Thurs 8/26 12:01am + Friday–Sun 11am, 2:30, 6, 9:30, no 11am Mon-Thurs 9/02
The Switch  2:30, 4:50, 7:20, 9:30  + Fri, Sat, Sun 12:10, 2:45, 7:15, 9:20
Dinner for Schmucks  4:40, 9:20 Ends Thurs 8/26
Step Up 3D  2:20, 7:10, 
The Kids Are All Right  2:10, 4:30, 7, 9:10 + Fri, Sat & Sun noon�

NICKELODEON     426–7500
The Disappearance of Alice Creed  3, 5:10, 7:20, 9:40 
Get Low  2:50, 5, 7:10, 9:20  +Sat, Sun 12:40
Mao’s Last Dancer  2, 4:30, 7, 9:30  + Sat, Sun 11:40
Restrepo  2:40, 4:50, 6:50, 8:50


APTOS CINEMA    426–7500
Nanny McPhee Returns  2, 4:20, 6:40, 8:50 
The Extra Man  1:50, 6:50  + Sat, Sun 11:40am
The Girl Who Played with Fire  4:10, 9
Saturday + Sunday Weekend Matinee The Awful Truth  11am
Advanced Ticket for Sept 1st The American

GREEN VALLEY CINEMA 8    761–8200
Vampires Suck  1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:30, 9:30  +Sat, Sun 11:15am
The Expendables  1:30, 4:30, 7, 9:25  + Sat, Sun 11am
Piranha 3D  1, 3:10, 5:10, 7:15, 9:25  + Sat, Sun 11am
Nanny McPhee Returns Ends 8/31  1:30, 4:30, 7, 9:20 + Sat, Sun 11:05am
The Switch  1:30, 4:30, 7:10, 9:25  + Sat, Sun 11am
Takers  1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:25 + Sat, Sun 11:05am
The Last Exorcism  1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:25  + Sat , Sun 11:05am
Eat Pray Love  1:15, 4:10, 7, 9:30  + Sat, Sun 11am, 1:40, 4:20
Advanced Ticket for Sept 1st  The American

CINELUX SCOTTS VALLEY #6    438–3260
Nanny McPhee Returns  11am, 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9  + Mon-Thurs no 11am
The Expendables  Fri – Sun  11:55, 2:20, 4:45, 7:15, 9:40  + Mon – Thurs no 11:55
Eat Pray Love  12:30, 3:30, 6:45, 9:45
Inception  3:45, 7, 10
Cats & Dogs: Revenge of Kitty Galore 3D  Fri – Thurs  11:45am, 1:45
Vampires Suck  11:15am, 1:15, 3:15, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Mon – Thurs no 11:15am
Piranha 3D  Fri–Tues   12:45, 3, 5:15, 7:45, 10
The American  Weds – Thurs  2, 4:30, 7, 9:30

CINELUX 41ST AVE CINEMA    479–3504
Eat Pray Love  12:30, 3:45, 7, 10
Piranha 3D  12:45, 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
The Other Guys  11:55am, 2:20, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45

SC CINEMA 9    1–800–326–3264 #1700

Piranha 3D  12:50, 3:05, 5:25, 7:40, 10
The Last Exorcism  1, 3:20, 5:40, 8, 10:15
Inception  1:15, 4:30, 7:50
Nanny McPhee Returns  1:20, 4:10, 6:50, 9:25       
Takers  11:45am, 2:10, 4:40, 7:15, 9:45  +  Mon-Tues no 11:45
Vampires Suck  12:10, 2:35, 5:05, 7:35, 10:05  + Mon – Tues no 12:10
The Other Guys  1:45, 4:20, 7, 9:30
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World  Noon, 2:25, 4:50, 7:35, 9:50  + Mon–Tues no noon
The American  Starts 09/01 Call for Showtimes
Flash Back Feature Spirited Away  Thurs 9/2  8

RIVERFRONT     1–800–326–3264 #1701
Eat Pray Love  12:30, 3:45, 6:45, 9:45
Lottery Ticket  1, 4, 7, 9:20

Movie schedule runs Friday through Thursday.
All times are PM unless otherwise stated.

Movie Theatres in Santa Cruz area >

More Good Times

 

Santa Cruz Area Events

   

 

Music Calendar

>GT Weekly Club Grid PDF >

 

Memory Matters

Twenty years after the fact, a geologist and a historian say we must not forget “Loma Prieta was a humbling experience for most of us. a reminder of our diminutive stature in the grand scheme of things. I think that remembering events like that is a perfect antidote for our collective hubris; it keeps us honest.” —Sandy Lydon, ‘History Dude’  

 

Biodiesel Revisited

Whatever happened to biodiesel? Once—not so long ago—it was hailed as an immediate and sustainable way to alleviate dependence on oil and reduce CO2 emissions. But lately biodiesel seems to be living in the shadow of other green technologies, like spotlight-stealing electric cars. However, the absence of fanfare hasn’t deterred Santa Cruz’s Kings of Biodiesel, Green Station owners Bill Le Bon and Ray Newkirk, from continuing the fight. While forced to lease U-Hauls out of the Green Station lot to make ends meet (and sell some of those sly electric cars, which they also agree are great eco-choices), they remain committed to keeping the biodiesel pumps alive and accessible for Santa Cruz.

 

Kuumbwa Jazz: Small But Mighty

Starting a nonprofit jazz organization in a little coastal town just south of San Francisco doesn’t seem too promising, and naming it an often mispronounced Swahili word can’t be the best marketing ploy. Still, in 1975, a 19-year-old Tim Jackson joined forces with KUSP programmers Rich Wills and Sheba Burney to do just that. The project would swell into the Kuumbwa Jazz Society, the Kuumbwa Jazz Center, and decades of hosting the top jazz musicians from town and from around the globe.

 

On the Air Again

It’s not easy being free. There’s bound to be someone who will want you to pay for it. Or tell you how to express your freedom. One local experiment in freedom has resounded on Santa Cruz airwaves 24 hours a day, seven days a week for the past 15 years. But on Tuesday, Aug. 3, the experiment—known as Free Radio Santa Cruz (FRSC) 101.1 FM—went off the air and left a gap in independent local broadcasting. However, the silence didn’t last long: the underground station recently found a new transmitter location and is, as of this week, back on the air.  

 

Borne from Original Sin

What was Capitola's loss has become Santa Cruz's gain as Original Sin Desserts Bakery and Café moved into the Culinary Center on Front Street.

 

Ventana Vineyards Chardonnay 2008

The 2008 Gold Stripe Chardonnay is a take-anywhere, eat-with-everything kind of wine. It’s drinkable, delicious—and very reasonably priced at less than $15. Ventana Vineyards is a successful, popular winery. Their wines are always in demand, they can be found in most wine stores and supermarkets, and the label boasts that they are “The most award-winning vineyard in America.”

 

Why do you go to Burning Man?

Santa Cruz | Electrician

 

From the Editor

Plus Letters to Good Times When you grow up in a Polish household, food—God, sometimes a lot of it—is a major part of your upbringing. Stuffed cabbage, peirogis, Polish sausage, sauerkraut, beet soup, and special, fat, fluffy donuts you can’t find anywhere else but in your mother’s hot, steamy kitchen—all filled with tasty berry jam. Needless to say, my wonderful Polish  mother and I had to purchase my clothes in the “husky” section of the boy’s department at Sears. Still, being a foodie gave me keen senses—and adventurous taste buds—so it seemed absolutely fitting for me to attend  a rather unconventional local food festival last week, one I never would have imagined ever attending: The Young Farmers and Ranchers Annual Testicle Festival.

 

Journeys with Geneen

Former Cruzan and best-selling author Geneen Roth opens up about food, life, God and the legion of emotions that can illuminate our deepest held beliefs When you take your pulse, you know you’re alive. But are you really “living?” If Geneen Roth were asking that question, she’d no doubt add: How are you really living?  

 

San Narciso

While having sushi dinner at Mobo recently, I mentioned San Narciso, to which my friend pondered aloud, “Why have I heard of them?” The reason is because a new 4-song EP, Friend Prices, confirms what many local show-goers have already discovered: San Narciso, the year-old local indie rock band, is fantastic.

 

Loma Prieta Earthquake video

Exclusive '89 earthquake footage shot by filmmaker Peter McGettigan. See all Loma Prieta earthquake articles in the Santa Cruz History section >
Sign up for our weekly events newsletter
you can unsubscribe any time.
  • Login
    Log in to post comments, add Community Calendar events & get access to web-exclusive content
  • Create an account
    Registration
    *
    *
    *
    *
    *
    REGISTER_REQUIRED

  • Bookmark and Share