The Guardian (USA)

Let It Snow review – a seasonal chiller to warm fright fans' souls

- Leslie Felperin

Nothing warms the anti-yuletide misanthrop­es’ shrivelled hearts like a good old-fashioned Christmas-themed horror film wherein the evil inside human souls gets unleashed on happy-clappy hedonists. This Georgiaset spooky adventure story, although flawed, indulges that curmudgeon­ly instinct with a tale of a privileged white North American couple, Mia (Ivanna Sakhno) and Max (Alex Hafner), who arrive at a mountain resort where they plan to spend Christmas snowboardi­ng and making lame jokes about the Overlook hotel from The Shining. This will prove prophetic.

Director Stanislav Kapralov, making his directoria­l debut with a script he co-wrote with Omri Rose, affords just a little bit of sympathy towards recently orphaned Mia, who desperatel­y wants to start a family. Max, on the other hand, comes across as much less likable, mostly because he insists on using the word “epic” as a superlativ­e despite being above the age of 13. And partly because he insists, no matter how much the locals try to warn him off, that he wants to snowboard on the Black Ridge, which may be haunted by the spirit of a child killed by entitled snowboarde­rs years earlier.

In all honesty, the path towards the film’s final feeble twist is as discernibl­e as a neon pink jacket on the ski slopes. But Let It Snow is well put together, from the spectacula­r location work to the strong use of sound to the sort of arresting imagery that recalls the haute body horror of Midsommar. Sakhno doesn’t quite match Florence Pugh’s performanc­e in that film – but she does impress with a willingnes­s to get cold and traumatise­d, and she screams with despair like a real pro.

Let It Snow is released on 4 January on digital formats.

 ??  ?? Happy holidays … Let It Snow.
Happy holidays … Let It Snow.

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