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  1. Mar 3, 1989 · A womanizing alcoholic writer faces trouble with the law, ex-girlfriends, and jealous boyfriends. IMDb provides cast and crew information, user and critic reviews, trivia, goofs, quotes, and more for this film.

    • (5.2K)
    • Comedy, Drama, Romance
    • Blake Edwards
    • 1989-03-03
  2. Skin Deep is a 1989 American romantic sex comedy film written and directed by Blake Edwards and starring John Ritter . Plot. Zachary "Zach" Hutton is a successful author with a weakness for alcohol and beautiful women. The tumultuous course of his life takes a dramatic turn when his mistress catches him cheating with her attractive hairdresser.

  3. Because – for now at least – the person Zach loves most is himself. Writer/director Blake Edwards combines slapstick with battle-of-the-sexes brio in this gag-infused tale of a womanizer who ...

    • 2 min
    • 138.7K
    • Warner Bros.
  4. Apr 24, 2015 · Skin Deep: Directed by Jonnie Leahy. With Zara Zoe, James Collette, Jeanie Drynan, Rebecca Smart. A straight-laced young woman, in fierce denial of being diagnosed with terminal melanoma, finds herself carried away on an impulsive adventure by a queer stranger.

    • (189)
    • Drama
    • Jonnie Leahy
    • 2015-04-24
  5. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › 1019128-skin_deepSkin Deep | Rotten Tomatoes

    Hard-drinking novelist Zach Hutton (John Ritter) spirals out of control after his wife (Alyson Reed) and mistress both leave him. Alone and crippled by a bad case of writer's block, Zach slips in...

    • (28)
    • Blake Edwards
    • R
    • John Ritter
  6. Feb 2, 2024 · Alex Schaads feature debut “Skin Deep” is a stripped-down sci-fi drama that takes its time to explore the social and romantic ramifications of its simple premise. Body swapping movies are generally about giving the protagonist(s) a different perspective, offering them the chance to grow in the process.

  7. John Ritter stars as a novelist who drinks, womanizes and chases after a parade of bedable women in this 1989 film. Roger Ebert praises Ritter's performance and Edwards' direction, but criticizes the film's tone and message.