"In this film, skin is a metaphor much like you might consider a mask to hide your true self. He is bearing his all to her not because she demanded it (at no time did she ever make any sort of demands on him) but because he is in love with her and doesn't want to keep anything hidden. You can also pick up on this from the word usage about openness and revelation and how he "already felt like he was saying enough." She doesn't have a fear of commitment so much as that reservation inside all of us to reveal our true selves ESPECIALLY to people we love; and her devotion to him isn't in question because she cleans up after him for hours. And you can tell that he is bringing the openness he has with her into other aspects of his life because he is fingering his skin as it hangs in the closet, considering putting it back on to go to work but then rejecting it and making the decision to be who he is. That's why he's having a hard time with new clients, people who don't know him already. And we know that it's not because he is literally not wearing skin because his friends seem perfectly comfortable rather than sitting with a person who doesn't have skin. Her telling him that he will figure out how to handle things isn't her being lazy or not caring, it's showing her confidence in him and support, not wanting him to go back to hiding who he is just to make social interactions easier.The look he gives her during that dinner with friends isn't dirty so much as.... I suppose "expectant" is the best word. Less succinctly, he is somewhat hurt by her not being as open as he is and waiting for her to drop her own barriers around him. Also, in the shower, we see her testing herself and ALMOST taking her skin off as well, but she stops; not because it physically hurts, but because she's too frightened which we can see as a look of anticipation and then anxiety on her. The second bedroom scene shows him gently peeling her skin away (or starting to; whether she allows it or not is left up to the viewer) because, as the first bedroom scene and her narration (how nothing changed between them in bed) established, she is open and pure with him while making love. He wasn't changing her; he was attempting to draw her out of her skin in that intimate moment where they are alone together where she could feel safe to let her defenses down. In biological terms (to counter your "comfortable in your own skin" theory) skin is actually our first line of defense against all the various dangers of the outside world, and without it we would be incredibly vulnerable with all of our most important parts on display."
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Ele Tirou Sua Pele Por Mim
4.0 95"In this film, skin is a metaphor much like you might consider a mask to hide your true self. He is bearing his all to her not because she demanded it (at no time did she ever make any sort of demands on him) but because he is in love with her and doesn't want to keep anything hidden. You can also pick up on this from the word usage about openness and revelation and how he "already felt like he was saying enough." She doesn't have a fear of commitment so much as that reservation inside all of us to reveal our true selves ESPECIALLY to people we love; and her devotion to him isn't in question because she cleans up after him for hours. And you can tell that he is bringing the openness he has with her into other aspects of his life because he is fingering his skin as it hangs in the closet, considering putting it back on to go to work but then rejecting it and making the decision to be who he is. That's why he's having a hard time with new clients, people who don't know him already. And we know that it's not because he is literally not wearing skin because his friends seem perfectly comfortable rather than sitting with a person who doesn't have skin. Her telling him that he will figure out how to handle things isn't her being lazy or not caring, it's showing her confidence in him and support, not wanting him to go back to hiding who he is just to make social interactions easier.The look he gives her during that dinner with friends isn't dirty so much as.... I suppose "expectant" is the best word. Less succinctly, he is somewhat hurt by her not being as open as he is and waiting for her to drop her own barriers around him. Also, in the shower, we see her testing herself and ALMOST taking her skin off as well, but she stops; not because it physically hurts, but because she's too frightened which we can see as a look of anticipation and then anxiety on her. The second bedroom scene shows him gently peeling her skin away (or starting to; whether she allows it or not is left up to the viewer) because, as the first bedroom scene and her narration (how nothing changed between them in bed) established, she is open and pure with him while making love. He wasn't changing her; he was attempting to draw her out of her skin in that intimate moment where they are alone together where she could feel safe to let her defenses down. In biological terms (to counter your "comfortable in your own skin" theory) skin is actually our first line of defense against all the various dangers of the outside world, and without it we would be incredibly vulnerable with all of our most important parts on display."