I have to say your lack of insight and what art does to society is quite profound and it perplexes me when people fail to see the greater role art plays in society. You may think the movie was sick, but it actually raises several pivotal and very important questions that are all extremely relevant in today's political climate:
1. Gender
2. Sex
3. Identity
4. Rape
5. Love
And the list could go on. Not every piece of art is going to be politically correct or always have a pleasing form of content and I dare say a large reason why art exists is that it creates an arena where we can actually discuss what is politically correct or not and create worlds that allow us to imagine what happens when we are no longer restrained by our current morals, such as in Roberto's case. What happens when a plastic surgeon with access to extremely advanced technology goes too far?
What we get is a movie that is capable of raising many questions of what it means to be a man or a woman, what it means to have a penis or a vagina, what means we ascribe to the words man and woman, what it means to love and what love is, what classifies rape or not and what is rape and so on.
The Skin I Live In is ultimately a movie that is meant to make you think. It is meant to make you question things we take for fundamentally granted, e.g. every preson is born with a penis or a vagina and this shapes their entire identity and how they see themselves.
A notable example is the subtle scene in the dress store where Vicente asks Cristina why she doesn't wear the dress with flowers because it'd suit her at which point she retorts, "Why don't you wear it yourself if you like it so much?" and he doesn't respond. People may think these scenes aren't significant but they very much are in a movie that raises questions about sex and gender and the meaning we ascribe to them when shaping our own identities. The reason why Vicente of course doesn't wear the dress with flowers is because he's a man and he's a man because he has a penis and men do not wear dresses because dresses are clothes that are meant for women and women do not have penises, they have vaginas.
Now, we fastforward to the scene where we actually see Vera (or perhaps we should say Vicente since he seems to identify himself as Vicente again, the fact we can't even deal with this properly in the English language just shows how problematic this is) referring to this very scene and that she's wearing that very dress and you understand the irony behind it all. Suddenly it is legitimate for Vicente to wear a dress because he has a woman's body and is identified as a woman.
It would not be possible to raise these questions if Almódar had chosen to tell a story that is less "shocking" in nature, but truth is that people are tired of seeing the whole "boy grows up to like girl's dresses". Those stories are a bit overly politically correct and don't really fundamentally touch the issue as I think Almódar does, because whereas those kind of films deal with how society see gender and sex, Almódar ultimately wants to question the viewer how YOU see gender and sex. He wants to show how sex and gender are actually very fluid constructs and that man and woman do not end by simply having a penis or a vagina. This is apparent because Vicente starts to remember his old identity and see himelf as Vicente towards the end, as expressed in how he rejects Roberto. The moral of the story is that Vicente is still a man even though he has had every single piece of what is masculine about his body removed.
When it comes to difficult subjects such as gender, sex and identity, you can't always tell stories in a politically correct way like boy grows up to like dresses so he should be able to wear them. THat's made to fit the political climate but doesn't really add anything profound to the debate since those that think it is right that a boy should wear dresses will see the movie, those that disagree will probably not. Such stories therefore only help to reinforce an already existing view but it doesn't raise any new questions even if well told.
Almódar movie does because it speaks to a much larger audience and makes no claims about its political leanings. There is no right or wrong, only shades of grey. There are probably those people will insist that Vicente is a woman bceause he now has a vagina but it makes us think - is Vicente a woman or is he a man? What does it mean to be a woman or a man? Is my gender identity only so superficial that it's entirely based off my genitalia only? Why do we even attach meaning to genitalia to define who we are to begin with? Or our bodies?
And I could go on but to say that The Skin I Live In does not have anything to teach or to say entirely misses the point of the film. It has a lot to say about many things. There is no moral of the story, there is no right or wrong. I think many are perhaps a little spoiled watching those kind of movies where the answer is delivered on a silver platter - racism is wrong, murder is wrong. This is missing the point. It's not about right or wrong, it's about shades or grey.
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