#Bryon Widner
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
whereisyourpippinnow · 19 days ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
What if I take all this stuff off and I'm still a piece of shit?
Skin | 2018 (dir. Guy Nattiv)
23 notes · View notes
fullscoreshenanigans · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Something that doesn’t surprise me due to how prevalent they are as visuals to remind the audience what series they’re reading and for the multitude of things they represent but is still of interest to me is how I’ve never seen discussions or fanfics that touch upon the removal of the farm tattoos or Lambda branding once the setting switches to the human world. I’ve seen the latter mentioned as a point of distress post-canon (shout-out to chapter 3 of banana_slug_army’s Sunshine and Solace; definitely check it out if you’re a NER enthusiast), but the thought of removing them is never seriously considered by the kids or Moms and Sisters.
Below the cut is an assortment of reasons I’ve gathered for why this is and some musings on them:
1. Pain of Removal (Physical and Monetary)
This reason is the easiest to handwave. With fantastical creatures like demons being real in this universe, it’s not much of a leap to ask your audience to believe there is now an entirely painless procedure to remove tattoos or brands.
However, if someone wants to venture down that route, it is interesting to consider, especially given how young a decent amount of these kids are. Doing a quick search for tattoo removal and children understandably doesn’t yield many results, so I’m wondering if it’s something that should even be attempted on the youngest of them with the damage it could do to their skin. It could take multiple sessions before the removal is complete. (I’m not going to post images here because they contain nazİ imagery, but check into Bryon Widner for someone who underwent twenty-four sessions of extensive but successful tattoo removal on his face and neck for a year and a half after leaving the movement.)
And then I go with the Lambda marks being brands due to the red coloring they’re given in the anime:
Tumblr media
(S2e08. At least the majority of the babies sans Ray don’t remember the tattooing done to them. I hope they granted Norman the small mercy of knocking him out for this.)
Tumblr media
Removing those would require more intensive cosmetic surgery.
Regardless, the monetary cost for any of this is a non-issue because even if Norman and co. didn’t start an incredibly lucrative conglomerate so they could avoid as much influence of the Ratri family as possible, I feel like this would be something either they would cover (because not doing so is terrible optics) or the people performing the procedure would do it pro bono.
2. Discrimination/Attention
Discrimination is another one that Shirai handwaves fairly quickly after minor instances of speculating how successful they would be in assimilating into the human world.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
(Chapter 179)
So there’s no large, socially acceptable push toward scapegoating the cattle children on the outset of their arrival. However, I don’t think it would be outlandish for individuals or fringe groups to do this, especially with how they magically appeared all over the world. It’s ripe for conspiracy theories. (I’ve talked about this with @officersnickers​ for one of her AUs where a minority of people don’t consider the cattle children real people and dub them “numbers” for some ingroup-outgroup think.)
The opposite side of the coin then is attention.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
(Chapter 56)
Glory Bell’s, Goodwill Ridge’s, and Grand Valley’s placements are more easily hidden with clothing, but Grace Field’s takes a little bit more flair to hide in the warmer months. Yuugo is immediately able to tell where the kids are from because of this placement, something he wouldn’t be able to do with the other farms. It makes me wonder if Grace Field children in particular would consider removal the further along they are in life to avoid receiving pity.
[Tangentially related to this, the arrival of all these children might spark a trend of human world denizens opting for some misguided tattoo choices in a similar manner to what happened with the release of Stranger ThÄ°ngs season 4:
Tumblr media
so another aspect that might factor into this decision.]
3. Paradoxical Sense of Kinship
This is the most thematically resonant reason that’s made most apparent by Emma losing her tattoo as a symbol of the new promise she’s forged and the memories of her family that she’s sacrificed.
Tumblr media
(Chapter 181)
With the paradox being that these numbers were used in order to dehumanize them and catalog them as merchandise.
Growing up in Grace Field, the children undoubtedly saw images of people in books from the human world without numbers on their necks. It makes me wonder if the Moms of each house were given free reign on how to explain why this was so to their children or if there was a standard response passed down from HQ, because it is something that the kids notice before they’re aware of the truth in the manga instead of the ominous framing for the sake of the viewer in the anime.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
(Chapter 1; I default to the demons flipping them as another hurdle to deter the children from catching on to how closely grouped together they actually are, but like)
Tumblr media
(at some point multiple kids must have stood in front of the mirror together and seen the reverse. “If you’re not primed to look, you’re not going to see it,” yes, but still, lol. Chapter 181.1)
Once they escape the house, we again have those panels from chapter 56 of Nat and Thoma shuddering at the real purpose of the marks they’ve carried for their entire lives.
Tumblr media
And yet before and after this realization the children of Grace Field undoubtedly took comfort in seeing those similar markings so prominently on each other. As Don states in the English dub of the first episode, “even if we aren’t blood-related, we’re truer siblings than most.” They were brought together by circumstances unknown to them, but they all saw those numbers as a way they were tied together. So despite having the most obvious placement, I feel like the Grace Field children would be the least likely to opt for tattoo removal.
(You could further split up this up by how old the unaware Grace Field children were upon arriving in the human world. It wouldn’t be hard to imagine there being some dissonance between younger children who barely remember life in the demon world and older ones who were nearing the shipment age who bonded with the other children in their orphanages.
And then with the oldest cattle children—the caretakers of the various farms who learned of the truth and were forced to comply with the cruel system laid out before them or die—their memories of their time in HQ might mar any positive association they had with their tattoos as a sign of familial unity in their childhoods.)
By contrast, Grand Valley’s tattoo placement is on the chest.
Tumblr media
(Chapter 69)
And Glory Bell’s on the stomach as shown by Yuugo. Combined with the different settings of towns and teachers as caretakers as opposed to smaller family units intentionally framing themselves in that manner, I feel that this could lead to a greater sense of dissociation between the tattoos and a sense of kinship for all the cattle children not from Grace Field, thus potentially making it more likely they would be open to removing them at some point in the human world. Out of sight, out of mind.
Of course, all these characters are their own individuals and with enough proper set-up, I think fanfic authors could reasonably justify any of the cattle children removing these markings within the anime or manga canon or in No Reward AUs where Emma doesn’t lose her memory or her numbers. But these are the general trends I would default to if the topic is put forth in a fanfic, and I’d be interested in contrasting perspectives from characters either as the focus of a shorter piece or a reoccurring point of contention in a larger one.
102 notes · View notes
filmes-online-facil · 2 years ago
Text
Assistir Filme Skin: À Flor da Pele Online fácil
Assistir Filme Skin: À Flor da Pele Online FĂĄcil Ă© sĂł aqui: https://filmesonlinefacil.com/filme/skin-a-flor-da-pele/
Skin: À Flor da Pele - Filmes Online Fácil
Tumblr media
Bryon Widner Ă© um jovem homem que foi criado por skinheads notĂłrios na comunidade de supremacia branca. Decidido em mudar sua vida, ele vira as costas para todo o Ăłdio e a violĂȘncia que foi ensinado, com a ajuda de um ativista de direitos negros.
0 notes
psychoticful · 5 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
“Real family don’t make you owe shit.” Skin (2018)
58 notes · View notes
iwillnotdieamonster · 5 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
6 notes · View notes
deepredradio · 5 years ago
Text
Skin
Story:Bryon Widner wurde einst von zwei glĂŒhenden AnhĂ€ngern der “White-Supremacy-Ideologie” von der Strasse geholt und aufgezogen. Von Kopf bis Fuß mit rassistischen TĂ€towierungen bedeckt, lebt er ein zerstörerisches Leben, in welchem Gewaltverbrechen an der Tagesordnung liegen. Als er bei einer Versammlung die alleinstehende Mutter Julie und deren drei jungen Töchter trifft, wĂ€chst in ihm den

View On WordPress
0 notes
haute-lifestyle-com · 5 years ago
Link
Shocking Truth as a Skinhead Defects
0 notes
thenextrush · 5 years ago
Text
Skin: The white supremacist who developed a conscience (Interview)
Skin: The white supremacist who developed a conscience (Interview)
Media Screening (Maven Pictures) Duration: 110 minutes
Having not been familiar with the story or having any preconceptions, as a viewer a vexatious undertone of sympathy toward the character pays off as we’re taken on a journey to understand how Bryon’s extreme views and violent hate has come to be.   The closing credit’s of the film at the State Theatre gave way to a round of applause from

View On WordPress
0 notes
cultfaction · 6 years ago
Video
youtube
SKIN trailer released Skin is an American biographical drama film written and directed by Guy Nattiv. It follows the life of former skinhead group member Bryon Widner, and stars Jamie Bell, Danielle Macdonald, Daniel Henshall, Bill Camp, Louisa Krause, Zoe Colletti, Kylie Rogers, Colbi Gannett, Mike Colter and Vera Farmiga.
1 note · View note
onepeoplesproject · 6 years ago
Text
SKIN WINS! Short Co-Produced by Daryle Lamont Jenkins Nabs the Oscar
SKIN WINS! Short Co-Produced by Daryle Lamont Jenkins Nabs the Oscar
We want to thank the Academy
for giving us the opportunity to say that for real! And props to Guy Nattiv and Jaime Ray Newman for this excellent win! The feature-length movie of the same name hits theaters July 26!
(more
)
View On WordPress
0 notes
luv2films · 5 years ago
Text
Genre: Biographical Drama, Crime
Plot: Based on the true story of Bryon Widner.
A destitute young man, raised by racist skinheads and notorious among white supremacists, turns his back on hatred and violence to transform his life, with the help of a black activist and the woman he loves.
He undergoes painful treatments to remove the tattoos covering his entire face and body, the physical representation of the hate he exhibited to the world for more than half his life.
Story Location Based in: Michigan, Indiana, Tennessee
Character (Actor): Bryon Widner (Jamie Bell) Julie Price (Danielle Macdonald) Slayer (Daniel Henshall) Fred 'Hammer' Krager (Bill Camp)
2 notes · View notes
whereisyourpippinnow · 21 days ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I think real family don't make you owe shit.
Skin | 2018 (dir. Guy Nattiv)
11 notes · View notes
llanollamasblog-blog · 6 years ago
Text
OSCAR 2019
Por: Uzziel Torres
Tumblr media
Este 24 de febrero tuvo lugar la gala de los premios Oscar, en su 91° edición, y como siempre han dado de que hablar. Así que aquí en El Llano En Llamas no queremos quedarnos fuera sin dar nuestra opinión sobre las películas que resultaron ganadoras.
Primero, y como ya es costumbre, se entregĂł el premio a mejor actriz de reparto, el cual realmente no importaba quien lo ganara; no porque el premio no tenga un valor relevante, sino porque todas las actrices nominadas eran justas acreedoras a la estatuilla. Obviamente aquĂ­ apoyĂĄbamos principalmente al talento mexicano, Marina de Tavira, quien hizo un gran trabajo interpretando a una mujer estresada por los problemas que ocasionan una separaciĂłn y el cuidado de sus cuatro hijos por si sola. Sin embargo, ganĂł Regina King, actriz afroamericana que nos hace creer que la academia le interesa mĂĄs ser incluyente y polĂ­ticamente correcta que realmente premiar el arte.
Después le siguieron los premios para las categorías de sonido, edición, maquillaje, vestuario, diseño de producción y banda sonora. Ponemos todas estas premiaciones en un mismo saco, ya que, parece que sólo sirvieron para justificar las nominaciones a Black Panther y Bohemian Rhapsody, puesto que les dieron la estatuilla a estas cintas que ni si quiera deberían estar nominadas. Y no es que sean malas películas; pero con esto, una vez mås vemos como a la academia le interesa mås mantener su audiencia que realmente premiar el arte. En esta primera ronda destacamos las injusticias a la edición de sonido de A Quiet Place, a el vestuario de The Favourite y al diseño de producción de Roma.
Posteriormente la ceremonia mejorĂł dando los justos reconocimientos a filmes como First Man por sus efectos visuales, que no eran tantos ni tan notorios como los de Avengers o Ready Player One, pero que cumplĂ­an el propĂłsito como herramienta de ambientaciĂłn; a A Star Is Born por su canciĂłn Shallow con las grandes voces de Lady Gaga y Bradley Cooper; a BlacKkKlansman por su maravilloso guion adaptado liderado por Spike Lee; a Green Book por su gran guion original encabezado por Peter Farrelly; a Roma por su bella y bien lograda fotografĂ­a a cargo de Alfonso Cuaron y Galo Olivares; y a Mahershala Ali por su increĂ­ble actuaciĂłn en Green Book como actor de reparto.
AcercĂĄndonos a la recta final se dieron los premios individuales a las cintas siendo Period. End Of Sentence la ganadora a mejor cortometraje documental, que habla sobre la menstruaciĂłn en las mujeres de la India; Skin al mejor cortometraje, este corto narra la vida del ex miembro del grupo Skinhead, Bryon Widner; Bao al mejor cortometraje animado porque pues es de Pixar; Free Solo al mejor documental, este describe la bĂșsqueda del escalador Alex Honnold para realizar una escalada en solitario libre de El CapitĂĄn; Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse como claramente la mejor pelĂ­cula animada sobre Incredibles 2 y Isle Of Dogs; y Roma como la mejor pelĂ­cula extranjera, reconocimiento bien merecido y que nos sabe mejor, ya que, competĂ­a contra las grandes Cold War y Shoplifters.
La ceremonia concluyĂł con los cuatro premios que mĂĄs emocionan: mejor actor, mejor actriz, mejor direcciĂłn y mejor pelĂ­cula. DespuĂ©s de venir dando las estatuillas a quienes las merecĂ­an, volvieron a cagarla dĂĄndole a Rami Malek el tĂ­tulo de mejor actor cuando se encontraba contra los grandes trabajos de Christian Bale en Vice y de Viggo Mortensen en Green Book. Posteriormente nos volvieron a romper el corazĂłn, pues,  creĂ­amos que la academia volverĂ­a a actuar a favor de las minorĂ­as y le darĂ­a el premio a Yalitza Aparicio, pero se encontrĂł con unas amenazantes Glenn Close, Melissa McCarthy, Lady Gaga y Olivia Colman, fue esta Ășltima quien arrasĂł con todas y se llevĂł el premio.
Sin embargo, todavĂ­a podĂ­amos irnos felices a nuestras camas si Alfonso Cuaron y Roma ganaban las dos Ășltimas categorĂ­as. Alfonso sĂ­ consiguiĂł su muy justa estatuilla al demostrar toda la experiencia que ha adquirido en 27 años de carrera para entregarnos su gran obra tan personal. Lamentablemente no obtuvimos el final que esperĂĄbamos puesto que su pelĂ­cula Roma, ya que, a pesar de tener diez nominaciones, a pesar de ser extranjera, a pesar de ser de Cuaron, a pesar de tenerlo todo, perdiĂł ante Green Book, una pelĂ­cula que trata sobre el racismo. AsĂ­, una vez mĂĄs la academia nos demuestra que le interesa mĂĄs ser incluyente y polĂ­ticamente correcta que realmente premiar al arte.
1 note · View note
shortromantic · 6 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Jamie Bell as Bryon Widner in Skin (2018), directed by Guy Nattiv
13 notes · View notes
feilongfan · 6 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Jamie Bell’s new movie SKIN will also premiere at TIFF.
Jamie Bell stars in the true life story of Bryon Widner, a young man raised by skinheads, for whom turning his back on hatred and violence meant undergoing painful and expensive operations to remove the tattoos that signified his terrible past life — a process only possible with the support of a Black activist.
5 notes · View notes
pepejordao · 4 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Abordando temas extremamente atuais e relevantes como o racismo, fascismo e supremacia branca, o ganhador do Oscar de melhor Curta-Metragem por “Skin” (2018), o diretor e roteirista israelense Guy Nattiv lançou o longa homĂŽnimo, aclamado pela crĂ­tica durante o Festival de Berlim de 2019. Em sua obra, o cineasta aborda de maneira sensĂ­vel, humana e tocante, a jornada em busca de redenção de um homem doutrinado para cometer atos de extrema violĂȘncia, disseminando o Ăłdio atravĂ©s do discurso neonazista.
Na trama, o protagonista Bryon Widner – interpretado de forma brilhante e visceral por Jamie Bell (“Billy Elliot”) – Ă© um supremacista radical dos EUA. Apesar de suas açÔes sanguinĂĄrias e extremistas, Bryon se mostra cansado de seu modo de vida regado a crimes e devassidĂŁo. O protagonista vĂȘ na relação com Julie (Danielle MacDonald), mĂŁe de trĂȘs meninas, uma forma de construir laços afetivos e ter uma famĂ­lia.
“Skin” narra os caminhos de Bryon em busca de redimir seus crimes, mudar de vida e apagar as diversas tatuagens referente Ă  supremacia branca que carrega no rosto e no corpo. O longa Ă© baseado na vida do ex-skinheads Bryon Widner, integrante de uma gangue chamada ‘Vikings’, responsĂĄveis por uma sĂ©rie de ataques e assassinatos de negros e imigrantes.
A obra de Nattiv Ă© uma pĂ©rola do gĂȘnero, capaz tocar, incomodar e emocionar na mesma intensidade. O ponto alto da produção Ă© nunca soar grandioso em sua narrativa ou ter a pretensĂŁo de ser Ășnico. Guy Nattiv nĂŁo vai na contramĂŁo dos clĂĄssicos do gĂȘnero, usando artifĂ­cios jĂĄ conhecidos da temĂĄtica. “Skin” Ă© um belo filme por narrar uma histĂłria real, contando com atuaçÔes verossĂ­meis de seus intĂ©rpretes. No primeiro ato, somos apresentados a Bryon Widner que, apesar de seu jeito assustador, tem um lado humano e dĂłcil no momento em que estĂĄ com seu cĂŁo Boss ou quando defende trĂȘs meninas apĂłs uma agressĂŁo.
Se em “Billy Elliot” Jamie Bell revelou todo seu talento para o drama, em “Skin”, o ator Ă© coroado como a grande estrela do filme. Bell estĂĄ completamente entregue ao seu personagem em uma atuação visceral, pesada, conseguindo mesclar cenas de puro Ăłdio e amor com a mesma intensidade.
O roteiro contribui muito para a construção de seu protagonista, mas, Ă© nas mudanças faciais do ator que vemos o quanto ele Ă© grande. Jamie traz um personagem perdido, humano, doutrinado para cometer atos de pura violĂȘncia em uma vida amoral, baseada em um discurso de Ăłdio. Infelizmente, o roteiro derrapa em utilizar Julie como o Ășnico laço afetivo que instiga Bryon a mudar de vida. Ao final, fica claro que o protagonista tinha outra pessoa que lutou por ele e com o qual ele criou um laço tĂŁo grande quanto Julie e suas trĂȘs filhas.
O filme nĂŁo soa didĂĄtico em nenhum momento, mas peca por romantizar alguns atos de seu protagonista ou por se tonar pouco real na metade do segundo ato. Apesar do roteiro ser um pouco mais florido em alguns pontos, a montagem salva em momentos cruciais, principalmente, com o Ăłtimo uso de flashfowards, que aguça a curiosidade de quem assiste. A jornada de retirada das tatuagens assustadores de Bryon reflete a coragem, a força e a resiliĂȘncia de seu personagem. Em seu desfecho, “Skin” deixa uma mensagem esperançosa de uma vida construĂ­da em tempos de Ăłdio, regenerada.
0 notes