In Her Skin (2009)
9/10
Very hard to take...
29 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
I could hardly get through this film, I had to hit pause several times and get it together. Having never heard of this gut-wrenching story until now, it was very saddening to read the synopsis (parents of a missing girl launch a frantic search for their daughter not knowing that her former babysitter has killed her. This is a true story) and then proceed to watch the film.

I happened upon the movie while channel surfing and caught the scene where it looked like a girl (in a hospital bed) was being encouraged by an older man (played by Sam Neil) to talk to another man who was out of the frame but still visible. I pressed the info. button and the afore mentioned synopsis showed up. From the synopsis, I formed an opinion that the girl on the bed was either about to die and was being pumped for information or that she was the mother of the missing child. (BOY WAS I WRONG!!!!)

Interested in the film, I switched to another channel to keep the spoilers at bay then I did a search for the movie to see if it would air at another date so I could watch it from the beginning, set it to record and forgot all about it. I found the film on my DVR two days later and proceeded to watch it. Three things that stood out to me were as follows: The negligence of the local police, the supernatural power of love and bond in the Barber family (the mother knew her daughter wasn't dead initially when she went missing ---if the police had issued an AMBER alert they would have found her--- and the father eerily almost suffocated from an asthma attack after which he confirmed Rachel's death ---Rachel was suffocated to death---) and failure of society to pay attention to such a psychotic person as Caroline Reed who according to the film suffers from epilepsy, bouts of depression, severe envy and self-loathing. Those scenes, if you choose to watch the film will be hard to watch. Then, at the very end when Rachel's younger sister comes to her dad (played by Guy Pearce) and tells him that it's her fault her sister is dead because she is the reason her family knew the Reeds in the first place and her father's response to her. That was such a powerful scene.

It's psychologically multi-dimensional film-making at its best in the sense that you experience what the victim is feeling how she lived her life at the same time you experience what the perpetrator is feeling and how she lived her life, you see the parents on both sides, the children and you get to experience how all these people are feeling while all of this is going on.

Yes, we have seen and read horrific tales of child abductions and killings in the past and yes we've seen them made into films many times before but this film is different. This is the type of true-story movie that will haunt you long after you've watched it. It's the kind of story that would make you want to reach out to the parents and family of Rachel Barber (the 15 yr old girl who was abducted and killed) and extend your condolences. It's the kind of film that will make you scream at the screen right before the end credits role revealing that Caroline Reed (the psychotic killer) will be eligible for parole in the year 2013. It is the kind of film that will have you break down in tears when the picture of the real Rachel Barber (1983-1999) is shown in her obituary right before the screen fades to black.
13 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed