Film Review: Blood In The Snow

Dead of Winter is a surprisingly decent action film released in 2025, starring Emma Thompson as a recently widowed who is distracted from her efforts to scatter her husband’s ashes on a remote lake by an apparent kidnapping. The film is directed by Brian Kirk. The script was written by Nicholas Jacobson-Larsenand Dalton Leeb.

Other cast members include Judy Greer, Marc Menchaca, and Laurel Marsden.

As mentioned before, Barb is a woman who recently lost her husband. She decides to set out to a favorite fishing spot of theirs where she intends to scatter his ashes. On the way, she gets detoured by a blizzard where she happens upon an isolated cabin. She finds a peculiar man who does give her some helpful directions. She notices some blood on the snow and is told it was from a recently slain deer. Sometime later, Barb witnesses a young woman whose hands are bound attempting to escape the previously helpful man. Barb figures out that the woman is held captive for some unknown reason by a couple. Her efforts to free the woman goes awry and a cat and mouse situation starts to ensue across the frozen landscape which could lead to Barb making a heart-wrenching sacrifice for a woman she does not know.

Emma Thompson is one of the most respected actresses out there, and this role is a nice addition to the resume. The usual elegance she exudes is submerged by the weary, saddened persona of Barb.

Judy Greer plays the desperate, frenzied woman known as Purple Lady, who is the actual mastermind of the abduction.

The performances were quite good, and the reason behind the abduction is rather chilling, if a little implausible.

I thought it was interesting that many of the characters were not given actual names. There are billed as either Purple Lady or Camo Jacket.

There are moments where Barb is remembering how she and her husband got together, and a heartbreak that kept them bound together.

Not everything in the plot hangs together all that neatly, but Thompson still carries the lead role well enough to make some oversights forgivable.

Judy Greer is also quite compelling as the lead villain. She can pull off psychotic mania quite convincingly without getting too outlandish.

Anyway, this film was not something that seems well-known. I found it quite by accident, but it’s worth a look. Dead of Winter is one of the few films in recent years that was effectively and darkly diverting.

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