TedStixon

5th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Revealing mistake: Throughout the entire film, it's quite obvious that most of the "snow" is fake. It just doesn't quite look right. It often resembles mashed potato flakes or Christmas tree flocking instead of real snow.

TedStixon

5th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Continuity mistake: When Sam walks into his kitchen at the beginning after cleaning his driveway, he walks past his son. His son goes from having his right hand down on the counter to up, holding a ladle between cuts.

TedStixon

5th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Revealing mistake: When Jack is melting after being showered with acid, at one point, there's a very obvious cross-dissolve used to blend two shots into one as Jack is reduced into a skeleton. It almost works, except suddenly, the snow around him is slightly different. (Some impressions into the snow and whatnot appear during the fade that shouldn't, as does a few pieces of debris.)

TedStixon

5th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Revealing mistake: When Jack is being showered with the acid, you can tell that they had the actor lying down, dropped the liquid on him from above, and simply tilted the camera onto its side. The way it sprays "sideways" is incredibly unnatural.

TedStixon

5th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Revealing mistake: In the beginning, when Jack kills the guard then puts the cigarette out on his face, watch closely. As the camera pans down, you can see him starting to switch the lit cigarette in his right hand with an unlit cigarette hidden in his left hand so he doesn't actually burn the actor playing the guard when he "puts it out" on his face. It can be hard to notice at first, but once you see it, it's super obvious.

TedStixon

5th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Revealing mistake: At the very beginning of the film, we see the transfer vehicle carrying Jack driving down the road. You can tell in several shots that the (fake) snow isn't really falling, but is just being blown in front of the camera from off-screen, especially since there's no snow hitting the road, and it's coming from the side, not above.

TedStixon

4th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Trivia: The movie was shot in 1994, but not released until 1997 because the original distributor went bankrupt.

TedStixon

4th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

4th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Trivia: Ironically, the winter was unseasonably warm when the film was shot, with some days hitting 70 degrees, so most of the snow seen on the ground is completely fake.

TedStixon

4th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Trivia: Writer/director Michael Cooney has said that the budget for the entire film was roughly equal to just the catering budget for the 2003 film "Identity," which he also wrote.

TedStixon

4th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

4th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Trivia: The movie was inspired by a time writer/director Michael Cooney and some friends built a snowman while on vacation. The following morning, one of his friends told him she couldn't sleep because the snowman outside looked like it was eerily staring in her window, and it freaked her out. Cooney thought that, given the popularity of slasher and monster movies, a movie about a killer snowman could be fun, and he started developing the story.

TedStixon

4th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Trivia: The infamous "snowman rape" scene wasn't originally intended to be a sexual assault. As scripted, the killer snowman was simply meant to just be killing Jill by slamming her head over and over into the wall. However, given the low-budget effects and the fact she was in the shower, it unintentionally looked like the snowman was "humping" her while beating her against the wall. Since there was no way around this, they tried to play it off as a dark joke by looping in goofy music and sexual puns.

TedStixon

4th Jun 2023

Jack Frost (1997)

Trivia: Originally intended to be a $30 million thriller directed by Renny Harlin. When Harlin left the production and the budget was slashed to a fraction of the original cost, writer Michael Cooney took over as the new director and decided to rewrite the movie into a campy horror-comedy, since he wouldn't have the budget for all of the scripted effects sequences.

TedStixon

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