‘Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst
of wolves’
this quote from Matthew chapter 10 verse 16 opens Scott Walker’s (not the
singer dummy!) debut directorial feature film outing The Frozen Ground (2013)
which is based on the real-life manhunt for serial killer Robert Hansen.
Between 1971 and 1983 Hansen murdered between 17 and 21 young women in or near
Anchorage Alaska. He kidnapped them and took them out to the Alaskan
wilderness, let them go and then hunted them down, killing them with his
hunting rifle and then burying them.
Also written by Walker, this American thriller is undercut
with a relationship drama built on trust, between the seventeen-year-old pole
dancer and prostitute Cindy Paulson and the investigating officer Sergeant Jack
Holcombe, who was based on real life
policeman Glenn Flothe, played by stony faced Nicholas Cage, a man who became
obsessed with solving the murders and putting the killer behind bar’s. It was
Paulson who was Hansen first victim to ever escape and report to the police, she told them that she had been offered $200 to perform
oral sex, but when she got into the car Hansen pulled a gun on her and drove
her to his home in Muldoon; there, he held her captive, torturing, raping, and sexually
assaulting her. She escaped while Hansen was trying to load her into a
vehicle.
This was a
horrendous murder case whose victims were young girls that ‘respectable’
society looked down upon while allowing one of its ‘respectable’ citizens to
take full advantage of a system that did not protect its sex workers. Robert
Hansen, wonderfully underplayed by John Cusack, was a complex character, a
church going family man, married with a child, and a well-liked everyman in the
community where he lived. But a ruthless individual who planned his killing’s
down to the last detail.
Because of
its dark subject matter and the fact that it was based on real characters
Walker had to tell the story with respect for the victims and their families. He
also manages to avoid portraying the police involved in the investigation as
heroes, just ordinary men and women doing the job they are paid for. The film
also attempts to give you an understanding of what motivates a man to carry out
such cruelty, but I’m not sure it succeeds, as this is an unachievable task and
do we really ever know why such men carry out a series of killings, other than perhaps
for sexual gratification?
Vanessa Hudgens, who plays Cindy Paulson, had to meet the
real Cindy to understand fully the complexities of the character she was to
play. Paulson told her the reason she stuck with the investigation and was
willing to be a witness for the prosecution was she felt that she represented
all the victims that were unable to have their say. Cindy Paulson was typical
of the victims in that she had run away from home when she was eleven and by
the time she was thirteen she was on the streets.
Although this movie was not very well received by the
critics it certainly has some very commendable points. Vanessa Hudgens is
totally believable in the role Paulson and to my mind deserved recognition in
the awards season. Also DOP Patrick Murguia handling of the cold dark isolated
feel to the location shooting allowed the bleak atmospherics to almost become
an accomplice in Hansen’s horrendous crimes. The final word must go to the
director ‘perhaps the film will make
audiences think more about the people on the streets, the girls, the homeless,
that they are real people who were once part of a family’
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