Blackflix.com – Skin – 8-22

Studio: Elysian Films

Plot: Based on the truestory of a black girl who was born to white Afrikaner parents in South Africa during the apartheid era.
Cast: Sophie Okonedo, Sam Neill, Alice Krige, Hannes Brummer, Ella
Ramangwane
Rating: PG-13
Bottom Line: ****

By Samantha Ofole-Prince

A powerful and poignant drama based on real events, “Skin” is the true story of a black child born in the 50s to white parents in apartheid South Africa.

Sandra Laing (Sophie Okonedo) is distinctly black — in appearance at least — despite the fact that both her parents, Abraham (Sam Neill) and Sannie (Alice Krige) are white Afrikaners. Store owners in a remote
area of Eastern Transvaal, South Africa, Abraham and Sannie are unaware of their own individual black genetics and have lovingly raised
Sandra as their white little girl. Things soon drastically change when she is sent to an all white boarding school in the neighboring town of
Piet Retief.

Ridiculed and shunned by her classmates, she’s finally examined by State officials after several complaints pour in from other parents and teachers. After being classified as ‘colored,’ she is expelled from the school
and the story soon becomes an international scandal as her parents tackle the Supreme Court to have the classification reversed.

The movie follows Sandra’s thirty-year journey from rejection to acceptance, betrayal to reconciliation as she struggles to find a footing
in a prejudiced world.  Desperate to resemble her  parents and brother Leon  (Hannes Brummer), she  even attempts to scrub her skin white by using household cleaners when lightening creams fail.

With scenes carefully structured to tug at heart strings, particularly poignant is the test State officials perform to ascertain Sandra’s race.
This involves seeing if a pencil delicately placed in her curly hair would fall out with a slight headshake.

Okonedo (“Hotel Rwanda”) puts on a breathtaking performance
as an older Sandra whilst the younger Sandra is beautifully played
by Ella Ramangwane.  A heartbreaking drama, “Skin” is one of the most
moving stories to emerge from apartheid-era South Africa and has already won numerous accolades.