I agree with Hasek's comments. It reminded me of Kubrik (Clockwork Orange) or Gilliam (Brazil) on account of it's innovative style.
I do also agree that the ending is disappointing, though - probably my conditioning to Hollywood - but I don't know the book. Nevertheless, it is not inconsistent with the rest of the film.
The direction for me is first class: not cliche, patronizing or predictable, and Johanssen gives a very mature performance. She's a great character actress.
I'm not convinced Sci-fi is really the best genre to classify this piece of art. It stradles more camps than that, however, I sense that it aims to interpret its source accurately - or at least hold great respect for it.
At the thematic level, I am impressed that it is no respecter of taboos, but not in a tawdry, - even less - self-defeating way. Its subtle and masterful handling of the subject matter piques genuine interest and emotion without cheap sensationalism, stopping perfectly short of repelling the viewer.
The questions it asks couldn't be more relevant today, particularly for a Western audience;'Under the skin' may not break all box office records, but it is worth the effort to engage with the themes it presents. Not to do so would leave one the poorer. As a study in human nature it is certainly thought-provoking, particularly poignant is it's expose of our modern view of women. As social, environmental and economic comment it also succeeds.
Primarily for me, though, it confronts us with philosophical challenges to do with the nature of reality and the purpose or meaning in life. Does what we might call 'the other' or 'God' or 'a higher power' in the universe exist? Can we access it? Are we destined to a life of banality, or can things change? If so what would it take? Can human existence be transformed and rescued through self-discovery (alone), or does it take intervention from outside ourselves to bring about restoration, order, understanding, security? How, then, SHOULD we connect or relate with other people or the world around us?
Recommended watching for those of a discursive disposition. I wouldn't let my 7 yr old see it though.
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