'Sarah (Snook) is a divorced fertility doctor whose daughter, Mia, begins acting strangely on the eve of her seventh birthday. The girl’s disturbing drawings, fierce attachment to a cardboard rabbit face mask and sudden insistence that her name is Alice drive Sarah to despair and towards a reckoning with her troubled past.'
Source: Sydney Film Festival.
'Dating back to the 1930s – earlier, even – horror cinema has been socially and politically conscious, interrogating taboos around gender, sex, class and race along with the borders between states like pro- and anti-social.'
'It is not often that a small town like Waikerie in South Australia's Riverland welcomes the cast and crew of an international feature film.'
'Dating back to the 1930s – earlier, even – horror cinema has been socially and politically conscious, interrogating taboos around gender, sex, class and race along with the borders between states like pro- and anti-social.'
'It is not often that a small town like Waikerie in South Australia's Riverland welcomes the cast and crew of an international feature film.'