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Simon Dillon Cinema

A celluloid statement of faith: Films should first and foremost be seen in the cinema. I make every effort to do so, and do not review films released on “streaming”. Every film reviewed here is one I’ve seen on the big screen.

Film Review — Dead of Winter

Emma Thompson as you’ve never seen her before in Brian Kirk’s suspenseful thriller

3 min readOct 2, 2025

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Credit: Vertical

Not to be confused with Arthur Penn’s 1987 film of the same name, Dead of Winter could easily have been a run-of-the-mill piece of genre thriller fluff. However, it’s raised significantly above average by two factors: Firstly, the twists of the plot itself, with Nicholas Jacobson-Larson and Dalton Leeb’s screenplay proving more immune to “thriller logic” than usual (when protagonists make daft decisions to advance the story). Secondly, and even more emphatically, a first-rate central performance from Emma Thompson, as you’ve never seen her before.

A sixty-something Emma Thompson as action thriller lead? Why, yes. And she’s damned good at it, too. Not that her character, Barb, is in Arnold Schwarzenegger mode. Her back plays up from the beginning. What’s more, despite the outdoors-y grit she displays when going ice fishing in Minnesota, she’s far from invulnerable. She gets injured, sometimes seriously, leading to one particularly wince-inducing bit of DIY surgery. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

I’m keen not to give away too much about the plot. Indeed, I’d recommend avoiding the trailer as it commits the usual sin of showing too much. However, the setup involves Barb heading out to Lake Hilda for personal…

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Simon Dillon Cinema
Simon Dillon Cinema

Published in Simon Dillon Cinema

A celluloid statement of faith: Films should first and foremost be seen in the cinema. I make every effort to do so, and do not review films released on “streaming”. Every film reviewed here is one I’ve seen on the big screen.

Simon Dillon
Simon Dillon

Written by Simon Dillon

Novelist and Short Story-ist. Film and Book Lover. If you cut me, I bleed celluloid and paper pulp. Blog: www.simondillonbooks.wordpress.com

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