Snakeskin | |
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![]() Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Gillian Ashurst |
Written by | Gillian Ashurst |
Produced by | Vanessa Sheldrick |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Donald Duncan |
Edited by |
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Music by | Joost Langeveld and Leyton |
Production companies |
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Release dates | May 2001 (
Cannes Film Market) 11 October 2001 (NZ) |
Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | New Zealand |
Language | English |
Snakeskin is a 2001 New Zealand road thriller film directed by Gillian Ashurst and starring Melanie Lynskey. It was released theatrically in New Zealand on 11 October 2001. Despite not receiving an official release in the United States or the UK, it has played on television in both territories and amassed a cult following. [1]
Desperate for the type of all-American adventure she's seen so often in the movies, starry-eyed Alice ( Melanie Lynskey) sets out on a road trip across New Zealand with her best friend, Johnny ( Dean O'Gorman). Things take a devilish turn when they pick up the enchanting but dangerous Seth ( Boyd Kestner), an American hitchhiker on the run from a gang of violent skinheads (led by Oliver Driver) and a group of vengeful drug dealers.
The script was inspired by Ashurst's own experience of growing up in Canterbury: "There was always that sense that you wanted to go somewhere else ... On the surface it felt quite safe, but once I became a teenager and started going to parties, I learnt that Christchurch has quite an underbelly. Skinheads were quite a thing around town back then. They were always breaking up our parties and beating people up ... I wanted to confront that [in the film]". [1] She cited Badlands, Bonnie and Clyde, and Goodbye Pork Pie as some of Snakeskin's artistic influences. [2]
Snakeskin was filmed in and around Methven, New Zealand. [1] Ashurst felt the shoot had "a certain magic about it ... it was pretty intense", while acknowledging, "It didn't really fit what they say to do with your first feature, which is to keep it small. [Instead] we were doing a road movie with visual effects, explosions and stunts". [1]
After debuting at the Cannes Film Market in May 2001, [3] Snakeskin was released theatrically in New Zealand on 11 October 2001. The film performed averagely at the box office, [1] but was well received by critics. Bill Gosden, director of the New Zealand International Film Festival, called it "bold, funny, sexy and macabre", further commending the acting and cinematography. [4] In a more mixed appraisal, Variety's David Stratton felt that Melanie Lynskey was "excellent" in the lead role, while noting, "The first half of [this] Kiwi road movie promises much, but a spiral into death and violence toward the end, and a supernatural twist that doesn't really work, spoil what is mostly a pacy and, for a while, exciting yarn". [5]
Snakeskin went on to receive six prizes at the 2001 New Zealand Film Awards. [6]