Review of The Skin

The Skin (1981)
6/10
WW2 Italian Style
20 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
After watching Hollywood movies featuring stereotypes of Italians, it's fascinating watching an Italian film full of stereotypes of Americans - and British.

All movies tend to highlight national vanities even if the intention was reflection and introspection.

Here the scamming of the occupying American forces by the Italians is presented as a virtue whether it's the local mafia boss, workers in the brothels or swarms of streetwise kids. Where victories on the battlefield were elusive for Italy in WW2 these were victories for resilience and initiative.

The film is set against the backdrop of the occupation of Naples in WW2 by the Allied 5th Army of General Mark Clark, strangely called Mark Cork here and played by a slightly stooped Burt Lancaster. Kate Buford stated in her biography of Burt that many considered this his most ignominious role.

The urbane Marcello Mastroianno as Curzio Malaparte, the Italian Liaison officer, ties things together as he explains the facts of life to the naive and credulous Americans.

Random episodes show what happened to the Neapolitans after Italy surrendered and what they did to survive. Like director Liliana Cavani's "The Night Porter" there is no shortage of uncomfortable and nasty scenes.

Among them was the prostituting of boys to Moroccan soldiers. It's a sequence that smacks of truth. The Moroccan Goumiers had a reputation as fearsome soldiers, but also had a reputation for rape. The Italians coined a word for it "Marocchinate". Sophia Loren also had an encounter with them in 1960's "Two Women".

There are amusing episodes; the horde of kids who strip a U. S. Army tank as effectively as ants dissecting a beetle. However other episodes stretch credulity and some are tedious, especially the mobster who sells German prisoners to the Americans by weight.

The film is epic in scale with well-researched uniforms and equipment although it shows American units with both black and white soldiers where in reality the US army was segregated until 1948.

Although it had an eye on the international market, it's all in Italian (English subs) even when people are supposedly speaking English. And what a waste of a resource having Claudia Cardinale in your 2-hour plus movie and giving her 10 minutes of screen time.

The film drags despite bizarre parties, brothels, rape, war scenes, love affairs, an erupting volcano, and more rape. It's episodic nature and weirdness reminded me of another Italian movie: "Fellini's Satyricon".

It's watchable to a point although I couldn't help wondering what was Burt Lancaster thinking?
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed