Let It Snow (2020) | FuLl mOvIe
Watch Let It Snow (2020) Full Movie
Let It Snow (2020) Full Movie
Let It Snow is a 2020 American horror-thriller film directed by Stanislav Kapralov. The film was written by Kapralov and Omri Rose, and stars Ivanna Saknho, Alex Hafner, and Tinatin Dalakishvili. It was released on September 22, 2020 by Grindstone Entertainment Group Plot Let It Snow (2020)Separated from her fiancé after sneaking onto a restricted slope, Mia, a free riding snowboarder, must survive not only against nature, but the masked snowmobile rider in black who’s out for her blood. A movie worth watching for two reasonsFirst the good features. Ivanna Sakhno does an outstanding job as lead actress. Not an A-list name yet, but with a little luck will surely be on that list before long. Given the winter conditions in which much of this movie was made, her haggard expressions probably weren’t all theatrics, even if there was hot coffee and a warm blanket waiting for her just off camera as soon as the scene was done. She did most of her own stunt work too. Then there’s the cinematography. Awesome! And not just a reference to pristine snow-capped mountain vistas. Check out the scene when she’s fighting her way out after being buried in an avalanche. Or an hour into the movie when she runs away from that nutter on the snowmobile. Now for the bad. As someone who hopes to have a screenplay made into a movie someday, I actually home in on movies that get bad reviews here at IMDb, to note the shortcomings and check my own effort for similar problems. One issue that stands out are momentary flashbacks repeatedly interrupting tense scenes. Each time the atmosphere and pacing were ruined. Nothing of the sort was necessary in Jeremiah Johnson, for instance. Plot holes. It’s a rare movie that doesn’t have them, but as this story progresses over several days it gets ever more unlikely anyone could survive at all under such conditions, let alone keep trudging on and on. Hypothermia alone would probably kill anyone in wet clothes the first night, unless a roaring camp fire was lit, but that isn’t shown. And what’s up with her following a river downstream, which will eventually lead to be people, farms, etc., but for no obvious reason next shown climbing another mountain? Last and least, the story’s supernatural element seemed like an afterthought by the writer, rather than an integral part of the plot. Faults notwithstanding, Sakhno and the mountain imagery make this movie excellent entertainment. Not Last of the Mohicans excellent, but way, way better than the average fare we see these days, many of which have enormous budgets compared to Let It Snow. TrailerMain Cast |