HOME |  CULT MOVIES | COMPETITIONS | ADVERTISE |  CONTACT US |  ABOUT US
 
 
Newest Reviews
American Fiction
Poor Things
Thunderclap
Zeiram
Legend of the Bat
Party Line
Night Fright
Pacha, Le
Kimi
Assemble Insert
Venus Tear Diamond, The
Promare
Beauty's Evil Roses, The
Free Guy
Huck and Tom's Mississippi Adventure
Rejuvenator, The
Who Fears the Devil?
Guignolo, Le
Batman, The
Land of Many Perfumes
   
 
Newest Articles
3 From Arrow Player: Sweet Sugar, Girls Nite Out and Manhattan Baby
Little Cat Feat: Stephen King's Cat's Eye on 4K UHD
La Violence: Dobermann at 25
Serious Comedy: The Wrong Arm of the Law on Blu-ray
DC Showcase: Constantine - The House of Mystery and More on Blu-ray
Monster Fun: Three Monster Tales of Sci-Fi Terror on Blu-ray
State of the 70s: Play for Today Volume 3 on Blu-ray
The Movie Damned: Cursed Films II on Shudder
The Dead of Night: In Cold Blood on Blu-ray
Suave and Sophisticated: The Persuaders! Take 50 on Blu-ray
Your Rules are Really Beginning to Annoy Me: Escape from L.A. on 4K UHD
A Woman's Viewfinder: The Camera is Ours on DVD
Chaplin's Silent Pursuit: Modern Times on Blu-ray
The Ecstasy of Cosmic Boredom: Dark Star on Arrow
A Frosty Reception: South and The Great White Silence on Blu-ray
   
 
  Dead of Winter Hearts Of Ice
Year: 1987
Director: Arthur Penn
Stars: Mary Steenburgen, Roddy McDowall, Jan Rubes, William Russ, Ken Pogue, Wayne Robson, Mark Malone, Michael Copeman, Sam Malkin, Pamela Moller, Dwayne McLean, Paul Welsh
Genre: Horror, Drama, ThrillerBuy from Amazon
Rating:  5 (from 1 vote)
Review: It is New Year's Eve, and this woman has something to pick up from a locker, which she does by braving the cold, wind and snow and retrieving the bag, returning to her car and driving off through the bad weather. She is stopped by a traffic policeman who admonishes her for one headlight being broken, especially in these conditions, but she explains she has been unable to get it fixed what with the weather as poor as it is. He allows her to drive on, but as she pulls up a distance down the road, she is briefly startled by revellers; composing herself, she prepares to move on when suddenly a figure looms from the back seat where he has been hiding and murders her, then cuts off her ring finger as a trophy...

That introduction makes Dead of Winter sound like a slasher movie, of which there were more than a few during the decade of the eighties, but aside from being a neat short film in itself, it was also the lead in to a film that did not look to its contemporaries for its gory inspiration, but back to a B-movie of the nineteen-forties. In this case it was the Joseph H. Lewis cult favourite My Name is Julia Ross which detailed the yarn about a woman kept captive in an old dark house as her captors try to convince her she is someone other than who she believes herself to be for their own nefarious reasons. In that film you're unsure for a while what the truth of the situation is, but here you were in no doubt the heroine was being messed around.

That leading lady was Mary Steenburgen, playing Katie McGovern, a struggling actress who happens upon an apparent dream job when she is auditioned by a mildmannered producer, Mr Murray (Roddy McDowall), although once the movie is over, you have to wonder what he would have done if Katie had never shown up for the audition. It's quite the coincidence, and the fact that too much of this was farfetched to say the least might have been more successful if director Arthur Penn had conjured an atmosphere of crazed delirium, but he didn't, for the most part he kept things far too tasteful. So leisurely was his pacing that even when Katie is in danger of losing her life the pulses are not exactly set a-racing, as you observe her mishaps with detatched interest.

Anyway, Murray tells her she is perfect for the job, and before she knows it she has been whisked away to an isolated, snowbound estate in the middle of nowhere and a rambling, cluttered country pile where she is expected to run through some lines as test footage taken on a video camera. Her director? A curious, European-accented psychiatrist in a wheelchair, Dr Joseph Lewis (Jan Rubes - see what they did there?), who proudly displays his collection of stuffed polar bears (taking the winter theme a little too far, it must be said) and his piano which plays itself and begins to suggest Katie should really change her appearance for the role. Hence the distinctive Steenburgen mane of raven-black curls are snipped and shaped into something more conventional.

And her finger is cut off too. But we're getting ahead of ourselves, as it's a slow build up to the revelations of the final half hour and an expression of scepticism that any supposed criminal masterminds might have thought this plan could work. Penn, stepping in at the last moment to direct a script that was meant to be helmed by one of the scriptwriters, litters the movie with Alfred Hitchcock references, not quite Mel Brooks' High Anxiety, but enough to be a distraction when you notice them and Dead of Winter comes up a little short when comparisons are inevitably made. In its favour, the acting was fine, especially McDowall who makes his character's shifts between cowed and sinister very enjoyable to witness in the thriller context, and the look of the production was appropriately icy, one of the few films set at this season which had not one thing to do with Christmas. Yet for a plot which went off in wild directions, this never came across as particularly wild movie, maybe it was the bone deep chill conveyed hampering the excesses which could have made this a cut above. Music by Richard Einhorn.
Reviewer: Graeme Clark

 

This review has been viewed 6667 time(s).

As a member you could Rate this film

 

Arthur Penn  (1922 - 2010)

American theatre and film director whose depiction of the rebellious character in movies found its most celebrated example in Bonnie and Clyde, which was hugely important in ushering in a new style of Hollywood film, not to mention new styles in Hollywood violence. Before that he had helmed psychological Billy the Kid story The Left Handed Gun, the much acclaimed The Miracle Worker, and Warren Beatty-starring experimental flop Mickey One, which nevertheless led to the both of them making the gangster movie that was so influential.

After that, Penn moved back and forth from film to theatre, with album adaptation Alice's Restaurant, revisionist Westerns Little Big Man and The Missouri Breaks, and cult thriller Night Moves among the films that sustained his following. Others included Marlon Brando melodrama The Chase, Four Friends, gothic thriller Dead of Winter, and Penn and Teller Get Killed.

 
Review Comments (2)
Posted by:
Andrew Pragasam
Date:
13 Oct 2014
  I have not seen Dead of Winter yet but it is enthusiastically endorsed in some corners. Kim Newman in Nightmare Movies for one. Video Watchdog and Mondo-Digital film critic Nathaniel Thompson maintains Arthur Penn only "supervised" production and the bulk of directing was done by one Marc Shmuger, a friend of his son. Frankly, I am confused.
       
Posted by:
Graeme Clark
Date:
13 Oct 2014
  It's not terrible, it's just awfully daft but plays it far too seriously when the cast seem to want to have more fun with it than they were allowed. As for the direction, I did read Penn took over as sort of a "favour", though if he was guiding Shmuger it was very hands on guidance. Shmuger went on to be head of Universal Pictures, of course.
       


Untitled 1

Login
  Username:
 
  Password:
 
   
 
Forgotten your details? Enter email address in Username box and click Reminder. Your details will be emailed to you.
   

Latest Poll
Which star probably has psychic powers?
Laurence Fishburne
Nicolas Cage
Anya Taylor-Joy
Patrick Stewart
Sissy Spacek
Michelle Yeoh
Aubrey Plaza
Tom Cruise
Beatrice Dalle
Michael Ironside
   
 
   

Recent Visitors
Darren Jones
Enoch Sneed
  Stuart Watmough
Paul Shrimpton
Mary Sibley
Mark Le Surf-hall
  Louise Hackett
Andrew Pragasam
   

 

Last Updated: