The Man Who Sold His Skin (2021)

Movie · 2021 · Drama · 1h 44m · AR

Curator score: 4.6/10 (21.9K ratings)

What price would you pay for freedom?

Overview

To be able to travel to Europe and find the love of his life, Sam Ali, a Syrian refugee, accepts to have his back tattooed by one of the most sulfurous contemporary artist; becoming that way a precious work of art.

Ratings

Director

Kaouther Ben Hania

Production

Tanit Films, Cinétéléfilms, Kwassa Films, Twenty Twenty Vision Filmproduktion, Laika Film & Television, Metafora Production

Cast

Yahya Mahayni, Dea Liane, Koen De Bouw, Monica Bellucci, Saad Lostan, Darina Al Joundi, Jan Dahdouh, Christian Vadim, Marc de Panda, Najoua Zouhair, Husam Chadat, Nadim Cheikhrouha, Rémi Sarmini, Mouldi Kriden, Rupert Wynne-James, Wim Delvoye, Bilel Slim, Anissa Daoud, Patrick Albenque, Stacy Devorzon

Where to watch

Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads

Curator Review

Verdict

A sharp, high-concept satire with a strong premise and striking visuals, but it can feel schematic and a bit too tidy for the weight of its refugee and art-world themes. Worth watching if you’re drawn to provocative social allegory more than emotional subtlety.

Best for

  • viewers who like art-world satire
  • fans of political allegory and social critique
  • people interested in refugee stories told through a high-concept premise
  • audiences who enjoy international festival dramas with a surreal edge

Skip if

  • you want a deeply naturalistic refugee drama
  • you’re allergic to overt symbolism and thesis-driven storytelling
  • you prefer understated endings and emotional ambiguity
  • you dislike satire aimed at elite cultural institutions

Overview

The Man Who Sold His Skin has one of those premises that instantly tells you whether you’re in or out: a Syrian refugee turns his back into a living artwork so he can travel to Europe. That setup gives Kaouther Ben Hania a potent way to attack the art market, border politics, and the commodification of suffering all at once. The film is most effective when it leans into its absurdity and lets the concept expose how quickly people can be turned into objects of value.

Worth noting

It’s also a movie that wears its ideas openly. Some viewers will find that clarity refreshing; others may feel the satire is a little too neat, with characters and conflicts arranged to make the point as efficiently as possible. The romance thread adds humanity, though it can soften the sharper edges of the critique.

Bottom line

Even with its flaws, the film is memorable for the audacity of its central image and the way it connects personal freedom to systems of ownership. It’s a smart, conversation-starting drama that works best as a provocation rather than as a fully lived-in emotional experience.

Top Letterboxd reviews

davidehrlich (2.5★) · 190 likes

“The Man Who Sold His Skin” represents a small handful of long-overdue firsts — it’s the first Tunisian film nominated for Best International Feature at the Oscars, thereby making director Kaouther Ben Hania the first Muslim woman who’s ever been invited to compete in this category — but for all of the project’s barrier-breaking success there’s also something naggingly familiar about the choice to honor it alongside heavyweights such as “Another Round” and “Collective.” It’s not every year that voters… more

CinemaVoid 🏴‍☠️ (3★) · 162 likes

Give this movie an Oscar for most aggressive bacne and a Razzie for most disappointing ending.

john (3★) · 109 likes

So I had my doubts about "The Man Who Sold His Skin", but it's super interesting and I'm glad it got the Oscar nomination over some of the others on the Best International Feature shortlist. Beautifully shot. The concept is obviously super compelling. Felt a little long at some points, but was interesting enough to keep my attention. Maybe a little on the nose with the issues it tries to tackle, but never in a way that I found distracting.

deah (5★) · 93 likes

bombsite shrapnel jigsawed together in a glass case. oil paintings of shipwrecks and massacres. black and white photographs of starving children. kaouther ben hania satires the west's artistic commodification of the global south's suffering by escalating it to the highest level. with a surprisingly humorous script, she manages to present themes of exploitation, white saviourism, and performative activism without ever victimising her protagonist. white audiences will complain about the narrative's positivity, declaring it unrealistic, calling for more brown anguish in… more bombsite shrapnel jigsawed together in a glass case. oil paintings of shipwrecks and massacres. black and white photographs of starving children. kaouther ben hania satires the west's artistic commodification of the global south's suffering by escalating it to the highest level. with a surprisingly humorous script, she manages to present themes of exploitation, white saviourism, and performative activism without ever victimising her protagonist. white audiences will complain about the narrative's positivity, declaring it unrealistic, calling for more brown anguish in… more

san (3★) · 87 likes

Objectification to an extreme. About a Syrian refugee who tattoos his body for European art, this is much more energetic and interesting than I expected. Nearly every shot includes a mirror, and it looks and works so well. While its subplot romance kind of gets in the way of the heavier themes, it at least humanizes the man who sold his skin and gives the story a more personal feel. But when it does get heavy, it is thought-provoking on how… more

Recommended similar titles

The Square

2017 · Drama · 2h 31m · R · Curator 5.9/10 (222.7K ratings) · Where to watch: Hulu

A biting satire of the contemporary art world that similarly skewers privilege, performance, and moral posturing.

Parasite

2019 · Comedy, Thriller, Drama · 2h 13m · R · Curator 9.9/10 (6.4M ratings)

A sharp social allegory about class, exploitation, and the hidden machinery of value and status.

The Salesman

2016 · Drama, Thriller · 2h 5m · PG-13 · Curator 8.0/10 (126.3K ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads

Combines personal crisis with social pressure in a tense drama about dignity, performance, and public humiliation.

A Separation

2011 · Drama · 2h 3m · PG-13 · Curator 9.7/10 (456.8K ratings)

A morally layered drama that turns everyday conflict into a larger portrait of social systems and human compromise.

The White Ribbon

2009 · Drama, Mystery · 2h 24m · R · Curator 9.1/10 (162.7K ratings)

A rigorous social drama about power, control, and the way institutions shape behavior and cruelty.

Sorry We Missed You

2019 · Drama · 1h 41m · Curator 8.4/10 (48.7K ratings) · Where to watch: Kino Film Collection

A hard-edged critique of economic precarity and the way labor systems dehumanize ordinary people.

I, Daniel Blake

2016 · Drama · 1h 40m · R · Curator 8.5/10 (155.4K ratings) · Where to watch: fuboTV, Paramount Plus Premium, AMC+, Philo, Sundance Now

A blunt but moving portrait of bureaucracy, vulnerability, and the indignities imposed by institutions.

The Lives of Others

2006 · Drama, Thriller · 2h 17m · R · Curator 9.4/10 (652K ratings)

A tense examination of surveillance, power, and the cost of being reduced to a case file or function.

Incendies

2010 · Drama, War, Mystery · 2h 11m · R · Curator 9.6/10 (759.9K ratings)

A politically charged drama that connects personal identity to war, displacement, and inherited trauma.

The Hunt

2012 · Drama · 1h 56m · R · Curator 9.2/10 (1M ratings)

A socially incisive drama about how communities can turn a person into an object of suspicion and projection.

The Great Beauty

2013 · Drama · 2h 22m · Curator 8.9/10 (259.6K ratings) · Where to watch: Max

For viewers drawn to elegant, self-aware cinema about spectacle, vanity, and cultural performance.

The Death of Mr. Lazarescu

2005 · Drama, Comedy · 2h 34m · Curator 9.5/10 (17K ratings)

A bleakly humane look at systems that fail vulnerable people, balancing absurdity with deep compassion.

Topics

satire, political drama, art-world critique, refugee crisis, body horror-adjacent imagery, absurdism, social allegory, international cinema, darkly comic, festival drama

Open The Man Who Sold His Skin (2021) on Curator TV