Review of Frozen River (1929) by Mike M — 30 Jun 2009
If the river itself proves a rather obvious, Sundance lab-approved metaphor for the thin ice the heroine is walking on - yes, it (and she) cracks under the strain eventually - Hunt's screenplay does a lot with its twin themes of property and territory, setting out with some urgency what this woman is prepared to do to keep a roof over her children's heads, and recognising that the survival process requires endless negotiation and bargaining.
.. The film has many of the elements for a downer night out - an exercise in grim-faced book-balancing and penny-watching, sent out to counter the inanely cheerful profligacy of the major summer releases - but Hunt, and her leading lady, both draw you into, and even find notes to cheer quietly in, the lives of enforced flexibility and resourcefulness they depict.
This review of Frozen River (1929) was written by Mike M on 30 Jun 2009.
Frozen River has generally received very positive reviews.
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