There’s no shortage of invincible action heroes out there, and it’s gotten a bit boring, to be honest. Call me old-fashioned, but I miss the days when the heroes of the original Die Hard and Lethal Weapon movies only barely survived and ended their adventures battered, bloodied, and wounded. When was the last time Vin Diesel or Rock “The Dwayne” Johnson really got put through the wringer in one of their action films? Not that I don’t enjoy those types of films (I most certainly do!), but sometimes I want a different kind of action hero.
In Dead of Winter, directed by Brian Kirk, Emma Thompson is that hero. In this minimalist survival thriller, Thompson stars as Barb, a 60-something Minnesota widow revisiting the site where she and her late husband had their first date. It starts out sweet enough, with the beautiful Minnesota scenery (actually shot in Finland) and Thompson’s graceful performance doing most of the heavy lifting. However, things take a turn for the exciting when she comes across a cabin in the woods. Inside, there’s a teenage girl (Laurel Marsden) tied up, kidnapped by a married couple with insidious intentions. The wife (Judy Greer) is suffering from some kind of terminal illness, and she and her husband (Marc Menchaca) intend to harvest their kidnapped quarry for parts.
Barb isn’t a trained soldier with a “particular set of skills,” and she’s not a retired SWAT member. But she’s there, and when she promises not to leave the girl to her cruel fate, she is willing to do whatever it takes to fulfill that promise. What follows is a harrowing tale of survival, with Barb going toe-to-toe against opponents who are younger and heavily armed, if physically weak and way out of their depth.
Emma Thompson isn’t exactly Sylvester Stallone, but that’s a big part of what makes her so compelling as she goes through admittedly familiar action/survival beats. She’s not fast, she’s not strong, and she’s not even particularly skilled, but she’s righteous, intelligent, and strong-willed. Watching her survive, thrive, plan, and fight back is simply delightful, especially when she punctuates moments with a Minnesota turn-of-phrase, or sometimes just a simple “Uff da.”
On the other side of the coin, Judy Greer and Marc Menchaca are compelling in their own way. The film isn’t too subtle on its opinion on the American health care system, but it stops short of showing too much empathy towards Judy Greer’s character, and I’m totally cool with that. She is the “bad guy,” after all, and while she may have her reasons, it doesn’t excuse her actions. Dead of Winter might look like an indie drama, but it’s an action/survival movie at its heart, and is all the better for painting its villains broadly, while still giving them more detail than the average mustache-twirler.
Director Brian Kirk is no stranger to action, having directed 21 Bridges and worked on TV shows like Day of the Jackal, Penny Dreadful, and Hard Sun. His direction, paired with Thompson’s committed performance, imbues weight and gravitas into every moment. Every action taken by Barb has an impact but also takes a toll. She’s a hero, but she’s not a commando. It’s almost like you can see her video game “Vitality Bar” onscreen, indicating how much strength she has left as the film goes on.
Dead of Winter doesn’t rewrite the book or change the game, but it’s just such a breath of fresh air to see a tight action thriller that wrings every drop from its narrative, takes such strong advantage of its setting, and lays out its themes without hitting you on the head with them, all while featuring a unique main character that’s not the typical roided-out macho man. At a svelte 95 minutes, it gets in, speaks its piece, and gets out with the confidence that the viewer won’t mind a little whiplash from being rocked from start to finish. I never imagined this would be the case, but as it turns out, the action hero we needed in 2025 was none other than Emma Thompson.
Final Score: 7/10
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