Some I'd heard about already, but most of them I have not, including the Cold Prey franchise, of which there are 3 of them. The lack of someone like Ingrid Bolsø Berdal to carry the movie shows.Įnter your email address to receive notifications of new posts by email.I first came upon learning about Cold Prey and it's sequels on a "Best Norwegian Horror Films You've Never Seen" type of list recently and I must say, it was a rather impressive list. They don’t make up for it with nudity eiher (we only see the back of one topless girl – it’s a mainstream movie, you know). The group of 20-something young adults manages to act good on two or three occasions between them. They’re not doing a great job, which perhaps is the director’s fault more than the cast. One expects sloppy writing in the third movie (I have not even mentioned the plot holes and the artificial dialogue) but maybe they could have given us some great gore as compensation?įinally (and I don’t like to attack amateur actors), the efforts made by the cast leaves a lot to be desired. well, there’s a handful of gory scenes, but much of it is obscured, edited too fast or not used to its full potential. It could be anywhere that has a couple of old cabins. The Norwegian nature is used as a backdrop, but the snowy mountains are not (it’s not even cold), and neither is the hotel. On the same line, the characters are more generic than before, more or less one-dimensional psycho fodder waiting to be impaled or hacked. Much of the fault of this film lies in the writing the generic teens-in-the-woods-being-slashed concept is just one thing. Storywise, it feels more like a sequel to Manhunt than a prequel to anything, or something between Wrong Turn and Texas Chainsaw Massacre, for those not so enlightened in Nordic horror. We’re not given any deeper backstory on Gunnar the Mountain Man either, not so much that it counts anyway. While the introduction of two supporting characters offers some possibilities not seen previously in the series, the film follows the numbers and connects the dots as laid out by every single slasher film before this one. If the first two movies were formulaic, the third entry does nothing to raise the bar or rectify any problems seen before. Of course, some big guy in dirty old clothes wants to kill them the Mountain Man we know from the first two movies. The girls don’t like the vibes of the place and decide it’s better to sleep outside, so they find a place by a lake. A group of teens are hiking into the mountain to spend a night in the wilderness, and finds an abandoned hotel, much like Overlook Hotel in The Shining, but with more dust and rats. Perhaps they were joined by their parents, who were curious on this new phenomena.Ĭold Prey 3 (original title Fritt Vilt 3, meaning something like “open season”) is a prequel to the first two movies, and takes place in the late 80s. The Cold Prey series was not the first homegrown horror films up here, but they were perhaps the first movies to mimick their American counterparts 100%, which made them digestible for large crowds of (I am guessing) teens not used to hardcore horror, and now they were offered something almost as cool as the foreign slashers. Cold Prey 3 is as historical as it is average.Ĭomedies and children’s movies often produce sequels (the Olsen Gang series made it to 8 in Sweden and 14 in Norway and Denmark, and spin-offs for children as well) but for a mainstream horror franchise to reach three movies is unheard of in the Nordic region. With great success comes sequels no other Nordic horror franchise made it to two, or even one.
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