Frozen (2010)

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Frozen (2010)
No one knows you're up there

Three skiers are stranded on a chairlift and forced to make life-or-death choices that prove more perilous than staying put and freezing to death

Genre(s): Drama, Thriller
Rating: 7.3/10 (264 votes)
Release Date: 24 January 2010
Country: USA
Languages: English
Company: A Bigger Boat

Director(s): Adam Green



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Producer(s):
Peter Block - producer
Amanda Essick - co-producer
Jason Richard Miller - co-producer
Cory Neal - producer

Writer(s):
Adam Green - (written by)

Cast:
Emma Bell - Parker O'Neil
Shawn Ashmore - Joe Lynch
Kevin Zegers - Dan Walker
Ed Ackerman - Jason
Rileah Vanderbilt - Shannon
Kane Hodder - Cody
Adam Johnson - Rifkin
Chris York - Ryan
Peder Melhuse - Driver

Music: Andy Garfield


3 Responses to “Frozen (2010)”

  1. MisterWhiplash Says:

    Frozen is far from perfect, and gets off to a little of ashaky/predictable start with its characters. But once the lift stops(in a truly great shot we see the lift has stalled, the charactersthink it’s only momentary and talk about “ways to die”, and then thelights go off behind them one by one), it’s “on” as they say. It’s ataut little experience that made me feel cold to the bone. One needsheat after this ends the way one needs to get dry after coming out ofthe ocean ala Jaws.

  2. Greg Says:

    My favorite horror films always had a small cast. Jaws – my all-timefave – was essentially three guys on a boat. Paranormal Activity, twopeople. Splinter, a handful.

    Frozen won’t have the same box office punch as last years Sundancethriller, Paranormal Activity, but it should not be ignored. This is asolid edge of your seat type film that might not do for the skibusiness what Jaws did for beaches 30 years ago, but anyone that seesthe film will undoubtedly think about their situation next time theyfind themselves being lifted to the moguls.

  3. Timmy Says:

    The movie does drag, for about 10 minutes when two characters decide to keep their minds of the cold and the grim possibility of their death.But I can understand the Green likely wanted to continue to develop the characters so that the audience would continue in their invested interest.

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