"tremendous look at three people in varying stages of crippling mental prisons"
Rayne Holland lives the perfect life. Her husband Paul
adores her and their daughter Desiree loves her. On the
professional front, her fourth film documentation is
garnering all the awards. However, inside the façade,
Rayne hides a dark secret, a place where she mentally
vanishes when she fears something. Neither Paul nor her
best friend Gayle Davis realizes how Rayne vanishes in
plain sight. On the drive home from her latest award, Rayne informs
Paul that she knows about his affair with Gayle. She
understands why he would look elsewhere though she is
angry at Gayle for being promiscuous with her husband. As
Paul insists he loves her, a head-on collision occurs that
kills Paul and Desiree. Six months later Rayne totally
hides inside herself with only her sighs telling her
psychiatrist Dr. Pauline Dennis that she is listening to
the world around her. Pauline has her own problems, but
wants to help Rayne recover. Also at her side is Gayle
who risks her marriage to aid her best friend, but the
only emotion displayed by Rayne is hatred towards her. IN MY BEDROOM is a tremendous look at three people in
varying stages of crippling mental prisons. Especially
gripping to the audience is whether Rayne will leave her
sanctuary she has parked her mind in. The lead trio rings
true while the support cast including the deceased Paul
enables the audience to look even deeper at predominantly
Rayne, but to a lesser degree Gayle and Pauline. The
angst level is beyond the stratosphere as readers feel the
pain of the prime players and admire how Donna Hill
invokes deep reactions from her audience. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted December 8, 2003
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