RATED
///// TV-14 || TV-MA \\\\\
Horror | Thriller | Action | Mystery | Psychological | Drama
Strong Horror-Violence | Brief Strong Language | Some Disturbing Content

Inspired by American McGee"s psychological-horror game series "Alice".

Rochelle "Rachel" Auclair has been friendless, ever since she lost her mother and older sister in a car crash at a young age. At thirteen years old, she has been looked after in a children's foster home, where she will be treated for post-traumatic stress disorder, while taking along the handmade dolls her mother made for her tenth birthday, named Blade and twinsies, Peri and Pearl. To escape her demons, young Rachel creates a "fantasy" within her mind that will give her the right amount of security the "real" world couldn't seem to provide her with; her only retreat, it is inhabited by a humanized Blade, Peri, and Pearl (her only friends).

After years of her residency, as an adult, Rachel is released, and leaves her "fantasy" behind, but still bears the burden of the tragic event. As she urges to live on her own, she begins to have strange hallucinations that seem to revolve around the dolls of her childhood, during both day and night. She attended therapy for treatments like hypnosis, but due to her heavily-scarred psyche, prompted by both of her memories and visions, she's transferred to a mental institution that has replaced the foster home, a few months after her release. After many therapies, Rachel was diagnosed by the doctors for her "mental and emotional instability".

After finding her lights flickering, and the room door mysteriously opening by itself, she finds herself in a hybrid twist of both the "real" world and her "fantasy" world, where her humanized "friends" are seemingly real; invisible to the naked eye, but only visible to Rachel. She believed herself to be in a better reality, but soon finds her companions very different to how they were six years ago: They've become corrupted and twisted, equipped with their own devices, and harboring a dangerous, pathological intention for Rachel, until their fixation begins to drive them through a series of homicides around the hospital, just hoping to keep her all to themselves.

Can Rachel stop these dark incarnations from making her their own?
Or, were they right to believe that it's all just in her head; that there could be something more to her "psychosis"?