
Crushed Ice
This is another Royal Christmas Whatever movie that not only brings nothing to the table but rips the tablecloth out from underneath whatever was there in the first place. To say it was tired and formulaic gives it too much credit. This includes the setting of the Ice Castle Hotel/House/Igloo /Whatever it was in at least the 3rd Hallmark movie in as many years to feature that frozen fortress. I do not even have to summarize the plot because you already know what happens. Stephen Huszar played the prince and if you are a fan, he has a hot tub scene with the heroine, who, may I add, is fully clothed. But I am not a fan of him or his chest. Nothing against him, he is a perfectly serviceable Hallmark Hunk who does not, unfortunately, appeal to me. Newcomer Katie Cassidy plays Ava Jenson (Yenson), a successful respected architect who comes to the Scandinavian Kingdom of Friorland (the “o” has a line through it) to help her Uncle put the finishing touches on the Ice-thingy. Newly single Prince Olaf or whatever his name is is smitten at once while Ava, though acknowledging his pulchritude does that ol’ “my career comes first and I am here to work and not get my uncle in trouble by flirting with a prince” thing. But she is won over during a very awkward day-long and half the night “date” to an isolated but luxurious cabin in the wilderness. They are scenically (white reindeer, Arctic foxes, Northern lights) driven there in a one-horse open sleigh driven by a coachman who mysteriously and permanently disappears into the wilderness so the couple can have their privacy. Nothing happens (she sketches environmentally correct emergency shelters for poor people while he lays out an indoor picnic) but it is sufficient to seal the deal on their “love.”
Now for the bad guys.
It’s not the King and Queen. They are happily married loving parents, although they want Olaf to get married to a proper suitable young lady who is not a scary American. The main evil one is their almost royal head-of-something-or-other who is a stone-cold bitch. She is not very ably assisted by her smug and boring daughter who is the one everyone but Olaf wants Olaf to marry. Actually, his name is Henry. Too talented for this role, Kathryn Kohut plays Sigrid, the daughter. The other cohort is Henry’s own assistant. He starts out not too evil, just bossy and disapproving but by the end is perniciously conspiring with Bitchy McMeany to sully Ava’s name. The successful scheme is so ethically low-down that even the resident paparazzo wants nothing to do with it. **Spoiler**The one light at the end of the tunnel was the anticipation of the evil schemers getting their comeuppance and, if not put to death, at least banished from the Kingdom. I couldn’t wait. But no. In a whiplash-inducing about-face, they turn all nice for no reason other than “Henry looked so sad” and are instrumental in getting Ava back to the palace in time to reunite with the Prince at…wait for it…The Christmas Ball. It was actually kind of fascinating how they did that. They even let Ava borrow the daughter’s ball gown. Henry looks sternly at them and says he “will talk to them later.” Needless to say, that is not the gleefully painful end I was hoping for. 4 melted ice cubes. But if you are addicted to Royal-themed romances or Ice Hotels, and have a low bar for these things, you might like it.
Thank you!! 🙂 🙂
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Not a lot positive to say about this movie. I like Steven Huszar but his last couple of movies have been stinkers. And what’s with the accents? Some sort of vaguely-European accent seems to indicate English is not their first language, though it appears to be the language they speak to each other even when nobody else is around. Zero chemistry which is weird because they are apparently a couple in real life. The lead actress has the skinniest legs I have ever seen, and maybe she should leave the leggings at home.
Finally, I agree with you about the ice house. While it’s cool, it’s becoming like pumpkin farms on Hallmark, and it’s been done better before. Even the ice slide was a dud, Kevin McGarry and Emilie Ullerup did it better in their movie.
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🤣🤣Pumpkin farms or vineyards. I was surprised it was only the third one when I checked. It seemed like more. It was so grating to me to hear Jenson pronounced with a Y.(but not always!). Stephen H. Was too old for this role. Someone mentioned that the Queen, his mother is actually younger than him in real life. I am kinda glad that didn’t hit me when I was watching it.
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Not a lot of positive to be said about this one. What was she wearing in the hot tub? I’m guessing she has tattoos on her arms or legs and that she was forced to be fully garbed at all times to hide them to avoid pearl clutching in Hallmarkland. From a dumb premise to terrible accents to bad casting (pretty sure his parents were about the same age as the Prince) to really stupid tropes, this one won’t be watched again.
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Never thought about the possibility of Tattoos. I bet you’re right. I didn’t hear about of the ages of the King and Queen v. Stephen Huszar until after I wrote my review. Probably a good thing because I’m afraid I wouldn’t have been able to resist piling on.
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nothing good to say. Kathryn Kohut is terrible like always, what a bad accent.
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I actually think she’s very funny.
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