This review
was originally written in Winter 2008.If you are one who is used to seeing low-budget independent films, then you will act accordingly with writer/director Courtney Hunt's impressive debut feature, "Frozen River," which essentially paints a fresh coat over the reasons why distributors continue to allow only a sliver of films like these through to exhibition. See this one while you can, because it will not be out long, and before you know it your Netflix queue will be inching nearer its max.
The star of the picture is Melissa Leo (Ray Eddy), a powerful actress with many dramatic notches on her belt, including the groundbreaking cop-drama "Homicide." Her character here is a struggling mother eternally stuck in a figurative rut — physically at one point — in a small town near the New York State border with Quebec, which also happens to be right alongside a Mohawk Reservation where smuggling illegal immigrants stateside is a common practice.
The film's timeline is brief, covering only the span of the couple days leading up to Christmas, and all the while Ray's fragile family fabric is slowly tearing amidst the unpredictable absenteeism of her childrens' father, (who is not seen once throughout the film) and the oppressive cold that has frozen over the St. Lawrence River. This natural occurrance provides — for better or worse — Ray with an unexpectedly convenient source of income, as the immigrant smuggling superhighway occurs over Mohawk territory, outside State police jurisdiction.
Desperate to move her kids into a new, more luxurious mobile home (for reasons curiously unexplained), Ray takes to the criminal life with a six-shooter at her side that she's "not afraid to use."
At first the plausibility of a basically single-mother taking up the vigilante lifestyle seems far-fetched, but after spending time in this no-future town and witnessing the perpetual depression that sets in along with the unceasing cold, one can begin to understand rash measures being taken in forgotten towns where opportunity comes only to the fortunate or the criminal.
As a study on the modern plight of poor and lower-middle class families struggling in America, (a subject Hollywood tends not to dwell on) the film is enlightening to the extent that its production took on fully the true grittiness of that environment, and capitalized on the need for engrossing performances from the actors, especially Leo and the Native Americans.
"Frozen River" will not recieve much critical attention outside of independent film awards centering on Leo's performance and perhaps Best Debut Direction for Hunt.







