\n"}},"i":0}}]}" id="mwOg">.mw-parser-output .div-col{margin-top:0.3em;column-width:30em}.mw-parser-output .div-col-small{font-size:90%}.mw-parser-output .div-col-rules{column-rule:1px solid #aaa}.mw-parser-output .div-col dl,.mw-parser-output .div-col ol,.mw-parser-output .div-col ul{margin-top:0}.mw-parser-output .div-col li,.mw-parser-output .div-col dd{page-break-inside:avoid;break-inside:avoid-column}
Writer Michael Cooney first got the idea for Jack Frost's story in 1989. Cooney, along with co-writer Jeremy Paige and producer Vicki Slotnick, stayed in a cabin one time up in Big Bear Lake. They built a snowman in the backyard, which Slotnick found creepy at night as it was outside her window, leaving her unable to sleep. Shortly after Cooney and Paige started talking about making a film about a killer snowman. Terminator 2: Judgment Day had released at the time and had digital special effects, so Cooney thought about a killer that was made of all the elements of water, including snow, ice and steam. The original script, inspired by The Abyss (with its Industrial Light & Magic-animated water creature) and Shocker (with its concept of an executed serial killer seeking vengeance by transformation), began with the action taking place in a small town and then in a skyscraper in Denver. When Cooney first wrote the script, he and Paige were thinking that Jack Frost would be a big budget film with all the effects. [5] [6] The film was planned to have a $25-30m budget and be directed by Renny Harlin. However, when Harlin's then-wife Geena Davis read the script, she called it "the worst thing [she'd] ever read" and rejected it. [7] In 1992, Prism Entertainment asked Paige and Slotnick if they could do the film for under a million dollars. Since they could not afford a director, Slotnick suggested that Cooney direct the film. Their script was full of special effects that were unable to be achieved on the film's extremely low budget, for which they had to improve the script. During pre-production, they still thought that they could make "quite a nasty horror movie" with "a bunch of good kills". They then saw the snowman, which led to the script being rewritten. Cooney, Paige and Slotnick spent $50,000 at a company that was supposed to make multiple versions of Jack Frost, but they only made one immobile 8-foot-tall snowman, which the crew had to embrace. It was made from three balls of foam. [5] [6] [8]
Cooney, Paige and Slotnick (along with Lisa Bankert) cast Christopher Allport in the lead role as Sam Tiler. Other actors and actresses cast for the film included Shannon Elizabeth in her screen debut as Jill Metzner, Stephen Mendel as Agent Manners, F. William Parker as Paul Davrow, Eileen Seeley as Anne Tiler, Darren O. Campbell as Tommy Davrow, and Scott MacDonald as Jack Frost. The film was shot on short ends (100-300-foot leftovers of 1,000-foot rolls that major film producers discard) in January 1994 over a course of 18 days. Portions of the film were filmed at the Fawn Lodge in Fawnskin, California, on the north west shore of Big Bear Lake. According to MacDonald, the film was shot during a severe winter drought, in which there was barely any snow on the ground, and temperatures often reached as high as 70 °F (21.11 °C). This resulted in the crew having to use foam and cotton as snow substitutes. [5] [6]
The crew used different props for the Jack Frost suit during production. They included one head with a big, open mouth with fangs, one body, and two or three other heads. The scene where the police station is blown up ends with a close-up of the snowman bursting into flames. To make sure that they would never need the "grubby" snowman again, the crew doused it in gasoline and burned it. Other props used for the snowman included two bodies (one with the arms by his side and another where the arms could move) and a couple of spare arms used for close-ups. The snowman costume's movements were very limited. The only time that Jack is actually seen moving is in a scene where he explodes and puts himself back together, shot in time lapse. The first scene shot with the actor in the snowman costume was one where Tommy is stabbed with icicles in the kitchen. The crew had to shoot the scene with longer lenses and compress it due to the scene being difficult to frame. [5] [6]
Further addressing the low budget of the film, Cooney references Campbell Soup's "Let it Snow" advertisement and notes that that commercial (which similarly features a living snowman character) had a budget "three times" that of the film. Furthermore, he stated that Identity , another film he wrote, had a budget of $30 million, while Jack Frost was made for "the cost of its catering budget". [9] Cooney also provided the voice of the man who tells the story of Jack Frost over the opening credits, while actress Marsha Clark did the voice of the little girl. [5]
The bathtub scene was intended to have Jack Frost smashing Jill into the wall until she died. It was filmed on a soundstage in one day toward the end of shooting, with the bathtub built on a raised set. For the shot where Jack rises out of the tub, stunt coordinator Kurt Bryant (in the snowman costume) and Shannon Elizabeth were strapped together on a scissor lift that raised them up 12 feet in the air through the fake tub. While shooting the part where Jack hits Jill's head against the wall, the snowman's carrot nose hit Elizabeth in her eye. Medics were called in, flushing her eye with saline. During the editing phase, Terry Kelley and other editors told Cooney, "You know what this looks like, don't you?" Rather than reshoot the whole scene, Cooney added a few shots of Jack making bad sex puns after Jill's death for continuity. [5] [6]
Prism was set to finance the film, but went bankrupt three weeks before principal photography, leaving its banker, Lou Horowitz, to oversee the film. When Horowitz saw the final cut, he deemed it unsellable and shelved it. The film would not be released until 1997, when A-Pix Entertainment bought the rights to the film. [5] [6]
![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (July 2018) |
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 17% based on 18 reviews, with a weighted average rating of 3/10. [10] Grave Reviews gave the film 2.5 out of 5 Graves. [11]
A sequel, Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman , was released in 2000. A third installment was planned with the tentative title of Jack Frost 3: Jackzilla , but hopes of the sequel being made are unlikely because of the death of Christopher Allport in 2008. [12]
The film was released on VHS by A-Pix Entertainment [6] and DVD by Simitar Entertainment in 1997. [7] Both releases have been long out of print.[ citation needed ]
On December 13, 2016, Vinegar Syndrome released the film for the first time on Blu-ray. It includes the film digitally remastered in a 2K presentation. Special features included an audio commentary, a video introduction by director Michael Cooney, and a video interview with actor Scott MacDonald and director of photography Dean Lent. [2] [13]