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Sundance ’10 REVIEW: ‘Frozen’ Unbearably Suspenseful

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To go along with my raving review, beyond the break you’ll find Ryan Daley’s thoughts on Adam Green’s Frozen, his thriller that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival last weekend. Dalye’s thoughts? He says Green “ sustains a level of suspense that is almost unbearable at times.” Read on for his review and go see if the film is playing at a theater near you when Anchor Bay releases it in theaters this weekend!
During a time when every good movie of the 20th century is being crammed through the Hollywood remake machine, Adam Green’s Frozen centers around a cinematic premise so basic and brilliant, it’s amazing that nobody has ever thought of it before. Three friends get stranded on a ski lift after the resort closes one snowy Sunday night…and the resort doesn’t open again until Friday. Green approaches the nightmarish scenario with an eye on agonizing detail, putting his three central characters through all manner of winter hell with an almost gleeful relish.

When longtime buddies Dan and Joe head up to the New England mountains for a day of skiing, Dan insists on bringing his girlfriend Parker. It’s a move that irritates Joe, who wasn’t planning on spending the day on the bunny hill, but the issue is put on hold after Parker manages to seduce some discount ski passes from a husky lift operator. As in Adam Green’s previous film, Hatchet, much of the first 30 minutes is invested in character banter, and it bears mentioning that not all of it is witty. But even if the early dialogue isn’t quite as funny as it wants to be, it sets an essential stage for the harrowing events to follow.

As the day draws to a close, Joe starts bitching about how much Parker has ruined their day of awesome man skiing, so the boys decide to head up the mountain for one more last run before the resort closes. To Joe’s chagrin, Parker tags along. The husky lift operator is about to shut down for the night, but the trio convinces him to let them board the lift one last time. Needing to talk to the boss about his schedule, the lift operator passes responsibility off to another employee, telling him, “there are three more coming down”. When three guys on snowboards reach the bottom of the mountain a few seconds later, the chair lift is shut down for the rest of the week, leaving Dan, Joe, and Parker stranded halfway up the ski run.

Over the next hour, Green sustains a level of suspense that is almost unbearable at times. From frostbite, to sub-freezing urination, to hungry wolves, if there is an aspect of extreme weather chair lift survival that is frightening or gruesome, you can bet your ass that Adam Green explores it in Frozen. Speaking of the wolves, it’s worth mentioning that Green’s decision to go with actual trained wolves, as opposed to the “we-still-can’t-get- it-right” CG wolves of most recent big-budget flicks, is a decision that truly jacks up the tension.

It’s during the final hour, when the characters’ nerves are stretched tight as lift cables, that the verbal sparring of the first 30 minutes really begins to pay off. As mentioned earlier, Green seems to take an inordinate amount of pleasure in putting his Frozen characters through the physical and emotional ringer. But his enthusiasm for the power of story is palpable, and the result is an independent nail-biter that makes Paranormal Activity look like a drama club skit.

Rating 4 out of 5 Skulls

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Do ‘Ready or Not’ and ‘Abigail’ Take Place in the Same Universe? Did You Spot This Connection?

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Abigail trailer

Both extremely bloody cat-and-mouse chases through massive mansions, Radio Silence’s horror movies Ready or Not and Abigail (now playing in theaters!) are certainly cut from the same cloth, but do they actually take place within a shared universe? It was a question the filmmakers were asked, and their response suggests that the answer to that question is YES.

Collider’s Perri Nemiroff asked the question of Radio Silence filmmakers Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, who co-directed both 2019’s Ready or Not and this year’s Abigail. As they point out, an Easter egg nestled within Abigail confirms a shared universe connection.

Bettinelli-Olpin tells Collider, “There is a portrait in the background of one of the scenes [in Abigail] of Henry Czerny’s [character from Ready or Not].” Gillet chimes in to clarify, “It would be a grandfather. A great, great, great, great grandfather [of Czerny’s character].”

Bettinelli-Olpin adds, “There is a little bit of a tied universe to Ready or Not within the movie.”

ready or not abigail

Actor Henry Czerny played the character Tony Le Domas in Radio Silence’s crowd-pleasing hit Ready or Not, the owner of the Le Domas Gaming Dominion and patriarch of the Le Domas family. The film centers on the Le Domas family’s deal with the devil to build their fortune, which Samara Weaving’s character Grace of course finds herself paying the price for.

If the Le Domas family exists in the world of Abigail, as the aforementioned portrait suggests, then that would indeed indicate that both films exist within the same bloody universe!

And it would seem there’s a deeper connection between the Le Domas family and the Lazar crime family introduced in Abigail. Have fun playing around with that idea. We know you will!

We’ll get you started. Is it possible that Abigail’s father is Mr. Le Bail from Ready or Not…?

In Abigail, “After a group of would-be criminals kidnap the 12-year-old ballerina daughter of a powerful underworld figure, all they have to do to collect a $50 million ransom is watch the girl overnight. In an isolated mansion, the captors start to dwindle, one by one, and they discover, to their mounting horror, that they’re locked inside with no normal little girl.”

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