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Frozen (2010 American film)

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Wikipedia article




'Frozen' is a 2010 American psychological survival horror film written and directed by Adam Green. It stars Emma Bell, Shawn Ashmore and Kevin Zegers as three friends stranded in a chairlift after a day of skiing, forced to make life-or-death choices in order to avoid freezing to death, while also trying to avoid being killed by a hungry pack of wolves.

Plot



Dan Walker, his girlfriend Parker O'Neil, and his best friend Joe Lynch, travel to a ski resort to enjoy a day on the slopes. Before departing, the three friends convince the ski lift operator to let them go on one last run down the mountain before the resort closes for a long weekend. The ski lift operator gets relieved from duty by a second operator. The first operator tells the second one that there are three people who still needed to come down, but the second operator mistakes three mingling skiers for Dan, Parker and Joe and turns the ski lift off as the three friends dangle many feet above the ground.

Trapped on the ski lift chair, the trio argues over how to escape before Dan jumps off the chair in an attempt to get help. The fall breaks both of Dan's legs and he is subsequently attacked and killed by a pack of wolves while his friends watch helplessly.

Joe attempts to traverse the ski lift cable, making it onto a nearby support tower, but doing this causes the bolt holding the chair to the cable to become dangerously loose.

On the ground, the wolves have gathered below, waiting for Joe. After being attacked, he manages to scare them off using a ski pole and then slides down the mountain on Parker's snowboard, planning to return with help, but the wolves chase after him. Joe does not return by the next morning, so Parker attempts to reach the support pole herself. As she stands in the chair, the bolt fails and the lift falls to a few meters above the ground. Parker jumps from the chair, but the chair then falls and fractures her ankle.

Parker begins to slide and crawl down the mountain. She encounters the wolves feasting on Joe's mutilated corpse and, too occupied with eating, they ignore Parker as she continues down, eventually reaching a road. While a car passes without noticing her, another eventually appears and the driver stops. He takes her to a local hospital, telling her that she will be okay. Parker closes her eyes as she recalls Dan telling her that she will survive.

Cast



* Emma Bell as Parker O'Neil

* Shawn Ashmore as Joe Lynch, Dan's best friend

* Kevin Zegers as Dan Walker, Parker's boyfriend and Joe's best friend

* Rileah Vanderbilt as Shannon

* Ed Ackerman as Jason

* Adam Johnson as Rifkin

* Christopher York as Ryan

* Kane Hodder as Cody

* Will Barratt as Sullivan

* Adam Green as Guy on Chairlift #1

* Joe Lynch as Guy on Chairlift #2

* Peder Melhuse as Driver

* Cody Blue Snider as Twisted Sister fan in cafeteria

Production



'Frozen' was filmed at Snowbasin near Ogden, Utah, in February 2009 and distributed by Anchor Bay Entertainment.

Release



The film premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. It was released in North American theaters on February 5, 2010, with distribution from Anchor Bay Films.

While playing at Sundance, the film caused quite a stir with numerous faintings reported from audience members that could not handle the tension of the film. One such fainting happened at the Tower Theater in Salt Lake City. 'Frozen' also opened the Glasgow FrightFest. On February 5, the film had multiple screens in areas in Boston, New York, Los Angeles, Salt Lake City, Dallas, Denver, Philadelphia, Minneapolis and Chicago.

The film premiered on February 5, 2010, with the entire cast and crew at Mann Chinese 6 on Hollywood Blvd. 'Frozen' was released in Malaysia on June 24, 2010.

Box office

'Frozen' opened to a first weekend box office of $131,395. It underperformed the following weeks. Internationally, the film earned over $2.4 million, bringing its total gross receipts to slightly less than $2.7 million. At its widest domestic release, it screened in 106 theaters.

Home media

The film was released on a single disc DVD and Blu-ray on September 28, 2010. Bonus features include an audio commentary with writer/director Adam Green and the leads Shawn Ashmore, Kevin Zegers and Emma Bell; the documentaries "Catching Frostbite: The Origins of 'Frozen'", "Three Below Zero", "Shooting Through It" and "Beating the Mountain: Surviving 'Frozen'"; deleted scenes; and the official theatrical trailer. The Blu-ray features an exclusive commentary from Adam Green, cinematographer Will Barratt, and editor Ed Marx.

Soundtrack

A soundtrack album consisting of the film's complete score, composed by Andy Garfield was released by 2M1 Records Group in January 2011. It is available in a limited pressed run of 500 copies signed by Garfield and Adam Green. The album was produced by George Fox. Additionally, it has been released on iTunes and Amazon as a download.

Reception



Critical response

Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 63% of 92 surveyed critics gave it a positive review, and the average rating was 5.85/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "Writer/director Adam Green has the beginnings of an inventive, frightening yarn in 'Frozen', but neither the script nor the cast are quite strong enough to truly do it justice." On Metacritic has a weighted average score of 43 out of 100, based on 16 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".

Critic Richard Roeper called the film "an entertaining, suspense-filled, sometimes wonderfully grotesque little scarefest", though 'The Hollywood Reporter' commented that it "is not written, directed, or acted well enough to be a first-rate thriller". Jeannette Catsoulis of 'The New York Times' made it a NYT Critics' Pick and wrote, "A minimalist setup delivers maximum fright in 'Frozen', a nifty little chiller that balances its cold terrain with an unexpectedly warm heart." Peter Debruge of 'Variety' wrote, "Dont be surprised if the movies most wince-inducing moments come not from the "disturbing images" (as the MPAA describes the sight of a leg bone sticking six inches out of one character's ski pants) but rather of the bad acting and worse dialogue."

Awards

It was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Horror Film, but lost to 'Drag Me to Hell'.

References




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