In  Courtney  Hunt's  Frozen  River,  two mothers begin smuggling illegal aliens across the 
Canadian  border by way of the St.  Lawrence  River.  One  of them is white American,  
the former is Native  American.  The  white mother wants to rekindle the trust between 
her and her iI sons. The  other mother simply wants her boy back from her former 
mother-in-law.
Shot  on DV  and acquired by Sony  Pictures  Classics  for under a million, River  won the prestigious 
Grand  Jury  Prize  in the Dramatic  Competition  at this past year's Sundance  Film  Festival,  
licking out Lance  Hammer's  forthcoming, hypnotic Ballast  and Ryan  Fleck  & Anna  Boden's  Suga
r,  Fleck's  follow-up to the enthralling Half  Nelson.
Filmed  in upstate New  York,  Hunt's  celluloid stars Melissa  Leo  as Ray,  the white mother, 
an employee of a local 99-cent store and estranged wife of a delinquent gambler husband. 
Her  husband, Mohawk-born,  sells her car to Lila  (Misty  Upham),  a local Mohawk  who wo
rks for a Bingo  hall. Lila  sees the car as an opportunity, but she doesn't expect 
a gun-toting standoff with Ray  at her little trailer. After  some minor strife, the 
women team up and become smugglers for illegals between Quebec  and the U.S.
Hunt  has a lot working for her. Her  minor budget gives the film a scrappy striking 
pull that would seem (more) oppressive if it had been made with big studio sheen. 
The  snow-swept tundra gives camera operator Reed  Dawson  Morano  and the theatre director a 
naturally beautiful scene to work with. Most  of all, she has Leo,  the New  York-born  character 
actor who cut her teeth on Homicide:  Life  on the Streets  and skint out as the saturnine 
wife to Benicio  Del  Toro  in 21 Grams.  Ms.  Leo  has the face of Shakespearean  heartache: Even  
in small glimpses of happiness, her sunken eyes express irrepressible melancholy.
The  screenplay, written by the director, sets up many conflicts for both Lila  and 
Ray:  Ray's  eldest son (Charlie  McDermott)  is tired of taking precaution of his little crony, 
a province trooper (a very beneficial Michael  O'Keefe)  starts suspecting the bicycle-built-for-two, Lila's  
Mohawk  elders do not approve of her newfound job nor her white business partner, and 
then there's the French-Canadian  gangster (Mark  Boone  Jr.)  lurking around. But  Hunt's  
script's nomenclature is dull and expositional, often working against the authenticity 
that Leo  and Upham  bring to their roles. It  also lashings the film with useless detours, 
tribal chief amongst them an flat bit involving a Pakistani  couple's baby being thrown 
in the snow subsequently being mistaken for luggage. These  situations divert care from 
Lila's  problems with her mother-in-law and her infant son, a far more enthralling dilemma.
With  a few exceptions (2004's Primer,  2001's The  Believer,  1996's Welcome  to the Dollhouse),  Sundanc
e  has consistently awarded films that talk about cultural issues without offer 
much insight into the matters. They  also crudely saddle more visually and dramatically 
imaginative films with special direction or cinematography awards. Frozen  River  ce
rtainly isn't the worst of its prize-holders, but it highlights a vapid streak in 
the festival's ever-deteriorating cred. You'd  hardly believe the same festival once 
showcased such groundbreaking work as the Coen  brothers' Blood  Simple  and Todd  Haynes'  Poison.
Man  this is a cold river.
More  info