You only need to read the title to get a clue about the
thrilling atmosphere of the movie. When you walk on frozen water, you can
almost hear the terrible sound of cracking ice, even though nothing has happened
yet.
You start expecting the worst when you see a woman has
decided to resort to human smuggling for the sake of her family. You also stop
hoping that the movie will have a lighthearted, entertaining moment.
Then you join Ray Eddy (excellently played by Melissa Leo)
in the spiderweb, as she tries to take care of her two sons and get by without
her husband, an addict who ran away with the family’s savings.
All that Ray’s husband left behind is his rusty old car,
which soon becomes his wife’s last resort to survival. And what can you use a
car for, near the Quebec border, other than smuggling immigrants crossing the
Canadian border into the USA?
Ray Eddy lives in an old trailer, in the small and isolated
town of Massena, and it is clear her low-paid cashier’s job does not help her
much when it comes to raising her two kids. She has managed to raise some money
to buy a new trailer for her family, but her Mohawk, gambling husband, steals
it and runs away and since then Ray becomes truly bitter. Everything connected
to her husband infuriates her. And, just as she is searching for him, she’s
lucky enough to cross paths Lila, a Mohawk woman working at the gambling club.
Ray sees Lila in her husband’s car and stops her with a shot through the door.
The awkward relationship between the two women starts when Lila tells Ray she
knows someone who wants to buy the car.
Before realizing what is happening, Ray sees herself
becoming Lila’s partner in crime, driving her husband’s car across the frozen
St. Lawrence river to Mohawk land in Canada. Driven by the thought that her
children’s breakfast is composed of popcorn and Tang, desperate Ray is ready to
team up with difficult Lila.
Lila Littlewolf ( Misty Upham) is a young woman who is quite
estranged from the tribe and occasionally smuggles immigrants through her
isolated and unpatrolled reservation, and this is the element that connects the
two women.
This relationship between the two opposed women gives the
movie its charm. Although this kind of relationship is encountered in many
other books or films, what makes this one special is the intensity in it, which
causes it to be very dramatic. The two are both very strong, rough and angry women,
but with completely different purposes. They seem to have nothing in common and
they can’t stand the sight of each other, but, as time passes, similarities
between them become more and more clear. And, as it usually happens, proximity
unites them. They spend so much time together that they become too familiar
with each other.
The film’s story is not so much out of the ordinary, but the
two actresses’ performances make it exceptional. They are both believable,
authentic and drama, so that one cannot see the film and go home unimpressed.