| Ice Queen | |
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| Directed by | Neil Kinsella |
| Produced by | Peter Beckwith David Giancola |
| Written by | Peter Beckwith Neil Kinsella David R. Williams |
| Starring | Ami Chorlton Harmon Walsh Noelle Reno Jennifer Hill |
| Music by | Richard Alan Salz |
| Cinematography | D. Anthony Giancola |
| Editing by | Neil Kinsella Devin Robinson |
| Studio | Edgewood Studios |
| Distributed by | Unites States (home
media): MTI Home Video |
| Running time | 92 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Ice Queen, originally titled Avalanche Run, is a 2005 American horror film co-written and directed by Neil Kinsella and starring Ami Chorlton. The principal photography was conducted in Vermont and the film was released directly to video on June 7, 2005 in the United States by the MTI Home Video media distributing company.
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Deep in the Amazon Rainforest, a well-preserved woman dating from the ice age is found encased in amber. Her body is then loaded onto an airplane to be taken to a military facility where she can be studied by scientists. En route to the military base, the plane is hijacked by a renegade group whose intent is to sell the specimen to the government for a ransom. The plane crashes into a mountain ski resort causing an avalanche and trapping all of the vacationing teenagers inside of the hotel. The suddenly awoken woman begins randomly killing the survivors by freezing them from the inside. One of the teens has an uncle searching for them on the outside, but he too is battling his own demons which stem from his alcoholism. This leads to a delay in the arrival of assistance in the ski resort town. The final showdown occurs with Johnny sharing a hot tub with the sexually invigorated Ice Queen and making her too hot to handle.
Film Monthly praised the film's opening three minutes, and then spoke toward the film's subsequent perceived flaws in style, plot, and effects, concluding that while the film "suffers from some predictability in its plot, it develops some minor innovations that put it at a cut slightly above mediocre."[1]
Screenwriter David R. Williams wrote "Actually, only the opening scene where the military convoy gets attacked and the concept of the airplane crashing into a mountain side and causing an avalanche to cover the ski resort are mine", explaining that his original screenplay Avalanche Run went through major changes due to producers and directors rewriting the script.[2]
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