Courtney Hunt's feature directorial debut FROZEN RIVER is a powerfully unflinching tale of two women, who, driven by economic hardship, form an unlikely partnership smuggling illegal immigrants across the Canadian border. Melissa Leo turns in a gritty performance as Ray, a struggling dollar-store cashier and mother living in a trailer home in upstate New York who is desperate to make ends meet. When Ray's gambling-addicted husband runs off with the family's payment on a new doublewide trailer, her life quickly spirals into a financial tailspin. During a frenzied search for her deadbeat spouse, she apprehends Lila (Misty Upham), a Mohawk Indian from an area reservation, attempting to steal her car. In the process of taking back her vehicle, she learns of Lila's smuggling operation through an unpatrolled corridor within Mohawk territory--the frozen St. Lawrence River that forms part of the border between the U.S. and Canada. Out of necessity, they form an uneasy alliance: Ray, working to meet the payment's deadline, and Lila, who scrambles to earn money to redeem herself to her estranged in-laws and infant child.
Within a stark, mostly minimalist screenplay, Hunt seamlessly works in contemporary anxieties: economic recession, immigration, and trafficking, but never puts too fine a point on social relevance to the detriment of a compelling storyline. As the plot heats up, the stakes Ray and Lila encounter get higher and the danger, more real. FROZEN RIVER is more than a somber meditation on lives in peril, it's a complex portrait of women from different walks of life struggling to find their ethical bearings in a harsh, unforgiving, and corrupt world.
Blu-ray Disc Features:
Region 0
Package Note: Region ABC
Full Frame - 1.33
Audio:
Dolby True HD 5.1 - English
Stereo - English
Subtitles - English, French - SDH
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentary:
1. Courtney Hunt, Director
2. Heather Rae, Producer
Interactive Features:
BD LIVE
Distributor Notes: Life in Massena is as harsh and barren as the frigid landscape. In this bleak terrain, two hardened single mothers are trying to make lives for their children. Lila is a widowed Mohawk whose mother-in-law "stole" her newborn son a year ago. Ray is a mother of two whose gambling-addicted husband just left town with the down payment for their new trailer home. Faced with little opportunity to make ends meet, Ray and Lila embark on an illegal venture transporting immigrants into the U.S. across Mohawk territory. With the money for the down payment within Ray's grasp, the women are determined to make one last run. When circumstances spiral out of control, the two women must make life or death decisions based on their friendship and love for their children.
Executive Producer
Charles S. Cohen: CINEMATOGRAPHER
Executive Producer
Donald A. Harwood: Executive producer
Director of Photography
Reed Morano: Director of photography
Review 1:
"This intense indie drama of unlikely female partners involved in a smuggling operation on the Canadian border is a bracing character study."
Source: Los Angeles Times
08/01/2008
Review 2:
3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Melissa Leo delivers a beautifully understated performance as Ray Eddy....Writer/director Courtney Hunt keeps her bearings on Leo, granting the actress unparalleled latitude to evolve a character..."
Source: Box Office
08/01/2008
Review 3:
"In FROZEN RIVER, Leo's acting has a brittle severity and power. Every moment of her performance feels torn from experience, and so does the movie, which finds a suspense in broken lives that are hanging in the balance." -- Grade: A-
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.46 08/08/2008
Review 4:
"A Sundance hit that is both absorbing and bleak, FROZEN RIVER is anchored by powerful performances, believable scenarios and excellent writing."
Source: USA Today
08/04/2008
Review 5:
"A spellbinding thriller, yes, but even more a portrait of economic struggle in desperate times."
Source: Chicago Sun-Times
12/05/2008
Review 6:
"Leo is a revelation, turning what could've been kitchen sink clichés into a tiny miracle of human resilience." -- Grade: A-
Source: Entertainment Weekly
02/13/2009
Review 7:
"Everyone at the center of FROZEN RIVER is standing on the edge of a chasm of despair....In the darkness, Hunt chooses instead of hope and redemption to go for reality, and that turns out to be a gift that is both brave and rare."
Source: Los Angeles Times
02/05/2009
Review 8:
4 stars out of 5 -- "Leo and Upham make an unlikely double act in a finely written, well-played film with a striking plot and setting. Hunt's clearly a name to watch..."
Source: Total Film
06/23/2009