Frozen Scream
Frozen Scream | |
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Directed by | Frank Roach |
Screenplay by |
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Story by |
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Produced by | Renee Harmon |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Roberto A. Quezada |
Edited by | Matthew Muller |
Music by | H. Kingsley Thurber |
Release date |
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Running time | 85 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Frozen Scream is a 1980[1] American horror film produced by Renee Harmon and directed by Frank Roach. It stars Harmon, Lynne Kocol and Thomas Gowan. Harmon also co-wrote the story with Doug Ferrin. The film achieved a degree of notoriety when it was released on video in the UK in 1983 and became one of the films on the government's video nasty list. The movie follows the story of two scientists whose experiments in unlocking the secrets of immortality result instead in the creation of black-robed zombies who must be preserved at very low temperatures to continue functioning.
Plot
Academic scientists Lil Stanhope (Harmon) and Sven Johnsson (Lee James) are researching the secrets of immortality. But the project involves turning their subjects into zombies and storing them in walk-in freezers. Their collaborator, Tom Girard (Wolf Muser), refuses further participation and is apparently killed in his house by men in hooded robes who inject him with a serum. Ann (Kocol), Tom's wife, arrives before the intruders can carry away his body.
Ann is hospitalized following what Lil calls "the incident in the hallway." She attempts to convince Ann that most of it was all in her head, although Ann insists she was drugged by the intruders and left unconscious. Lil says that the police found Tom's body but no evidence of hooded men or hypodermic needles.
Detective Kevin McGuire (Gowen) is assigned to the case, which he believes is connected to the disappearance of medical students Kirk Richard (Bob Rochelle) and Bob Russell (Bill Oliver). Kevin wants to interview Ann - sometime in the past, she had dumped him and married Tom the following day - but Lil prevents it.
Sven suggests discharging Ann and appointing Cathrin (Sunny Bartholomew) as her home nurse. Cathrin is a zombie. Tom had told Ann of the immortality project, and they'd attended a ceremony on a beach. Tom left to confess to Father O'Brien (Wayne Liebman) while Ann watched the students chanting "love and immortality" around a bonfire.
At their lab, Lil tells Sven that they're "interfering with nature" and that "the beings we create are not human beings." Sven assures her that they'll soon unlock the secrets of immortality. Meanwhile, Kevin tells Ann of his suspicions about Sven and Lil. Ann agrees to report back what she finds.
Kevin and Ann interview Fr. O'Brien. He tells them that Tom had said Sven was using curare on rats, then reviving them and keeping them at low temperatures to retard their aging process. But after being revived, Tom said, the rats acted as if they were "almost soul-less." Shortly thereafter, a zombie strangles O'Brien.
Ann gets a phone call from Tom, who complains of feeling cold and numb. The call ends abruptly when intruders burst into Ann's house. She calls Kevin for help and rushes to Cathrin's room. But Cathrin isn't there. Instead, a zombie grabs Ann and threatens to kill her and Tom if she continues to coöperate with Kevin. Cathrin returns and denies that anyone was in the house. Not believing her, Kevin takes Ann home, where they sleep together. Kevin declares his love for her; she says nothing about her feelings toward him.
Ann searches Lil's office and discovers photos of the missing med students. She tells Kevin that she'll search Sven's home lab during his Halloween party. During the party, Cathrin overheats and drops dead.
The party continues. Ann sees Tom staring blankly from the window of an old house. She calls Kevin. Inside the house, she finds a freezer containing Tom and the missing students, both of whom are zombies. The zombies attack. Kevin kills one but is knocked over by a car and taken to the hospital. Ann is chased by the second zombie. Just as he is about to kill Ann, Lil appears and tells him that he's been out of the freezer for too long. He immediately dies.
Ann is taken to Sven's lab, where he intends to zombify her. But Lil kills him. Lil asks Ann to take Sven's place on the immortality project. As a ruse, Ann agrees, but then destroys the lab. An angry Lil decides to inject Ann with the zombie serum. O'Brien, himself a zombie, arrives.
Ann, Lil and O'Brien visit Kevin in the hospital. Ann, now a zombie, promises she'll love Kevin forever. But her eternal love has a price, which Kevin pays as Lil plunges a hypodermic of zombie serum into his eye.
Cast
- Renee Harmon as Dr. Lil Stanhope
- Lynne Yeaman (billed as Lynne Kocol) as Ann Girard
- Thomas McGowan (billed as Thomas Gowen) as Det. Sgt. Kevin McGuire
- Wolf Muser as Dr. Tom Girard
- Bob Rochelle as Kirk Richard
- Lee James as Dr. Sven Johnsson
- Sunny Bartholomew as Cathrin
- Wayne Liebman as Fr. O'Brien
- Bill Oliver as Bob Russell
Production
Frozen Scream is one of two films made by Ciara Productions. The other was Hell Riders (1984), a biker movie set in a ghost town.[2][3]
Some footage from Frozen Scream was re-used in Run Coyote Run (1987), which was also produced by, written by and starred Harmon. The film is a crime thriller about a psychic who is trying to find her dead sister's killers.[3]
Release
Frozen Scream was shot in 1975, but not shown to distributors until "sometime around 1980" and apparently failed to achieve a theatrical release. Its initial commercial release was on VHS in the UK in 1983 by Home Video Productions. In 1985, it was released for the first time in the US on a double-feature VHS tape with The Executioner Part II (1984).[4][5] Because of the five-year gap between its filming and the date distributors got their first look at it, some sources give the movie's date as 1975[6] while others list 1980.[7]
British film scholar Julian Petty lists the film as one of the 69 movies which were on the video nasties list "at one time or another." But it was not one of the 39 films prosecuted under the Obscene Publications Act 1959, which had been amended in 1983 to include films.[8] According to British critic Neil Christopher, the film "officially (...) remains uncertified and unavailable" in the UK.[9]
As Fred Beldin at Allmovie writes, Frozen Scream was "withdrawn from prosecution perhaps because the bluenoses were too confused by the film's constant flashbacks, dream sequences, and extraneous narration to focus on a few gratuitous axe murders and eye-gougings."[1]
Distribution
No information regarding the distribution of Frozen Scream was found.
Critical reception
Critics had little good to say about Frozen Scream. Its poor production values and voice-over narration were common themes, though. In The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, academic Peter Dendle calls the film a "dismal and homely backyard effort" with "robotic acting, abrupt transitions, and annoying Wonder Years'-like voice-over narration." He also notes that "The zombies wear black hooded cloaks that associate them with a certain pre-Christian immortality cult and cheesy moustaches that associate them with the '70s."[7]
Glenn Kay describes the movie as a "totally nonsensical" and "forgettable little oddity" that "may supply a few laughs to bad-movie fans." He says that the "inappropriate narration (...) would be more suited to an infomercial" and that "Every element is truly amateurish, from the wooden acting to the lousy photography to the terrible score and the hilariously bad band during a party scene."[10]
Likewise, British critic Jamie Russell notes that Frozen Scream features "Hooded, frozen zombies [who] run amok in this cheesy 1970s outing." He points out that the "voiceover unhelpfully drown[s] out other characters' dialogue as they speak!" and concludes that the film is "Badly made, incompetently plotted; it's pretty dire."[6]
According to David Elroy Goldweber, "Apparently, all the sound was dubbed after filming, but some dialogue made no sense, so an extra voice-over (...) was added to clarify things. Yet no original dialgue was cut, so the second dialogue simply overlaps the first." Glodweber finds the film to be a "desperate mishmash of anything the filmmakers thought might entertain the audience."[11]
Beldin, the AllMovie reviewer, calls the film an "unintentionally surreal sci-fi horror yarn," and adds that "there's no doubt that Frozen Scream is a highly bizarre experience psychotronic devotees should enjoy enduring."[1]
References
- ^ a b c d Beldin, Fred. "Frozen Scream (1980)". AllMovie. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
- ^ "Ciara Productions". British Film Institute. Retrieved 2 February 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Budnick, Daniel R. (2017). 80's Action Movies on the Cheap: 284 Low Budget, High Impact Pictures. Jefferson NC: McFarland & Co. Inc. pp. 69–70, 160. ISBN 9780786497416.
- ^ Wedge, Matt (14 April 2018). "[My Exploitation Education] Frozen Scream (1975/1983/1985)". Daily Grindhouse. Retrieved 2 February 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Salkeld, Gavin. "Gavin Salkeld Presents Censor Cuts". Melon Farmers. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Russell, Jamie (2014). Book of the Dead: The Complete History of Zombie Cibena. London: Titan Books. p. 265. ISBN 9781781169254.
- ^ a b Dendle, Peter (2001). The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia. McFarland & Company. pp. 69–70. ISBN 978-0-7864-9288-6.
- ^ Petty, Julian (2011). Film and Video Censorship in Modern Britain. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press Ltd. pp. 213–215. ISBN 9780748625390.
- ^ Christopher, Neil. "The Video Nasties Furore". Hysteria Lives. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Kay, Glenn (2012). Zombie Movies: The Ultimate Guide. Chicago: Chicago Review Press. p. 98. ISBN 9781556527708.
- ^ Goldweber, David Elroy (2016). Claws & Saucers: Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film 1902-1982: A Complete Guide. Morrisville NC: Lulu Press Inc. ISBN 9781312288034.