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The Wolf of Snow Hollow (2020)

6.1 | Oct 23, 2020 (US) | Horror, Thriller | 01:25
Budget: 2 000 000 | Revenue: 239 828

Welcome to Snow Hollow.

Terror grips a small mountain town as bodies are discovered after each full moon. Losing sleep, raising a teenage daughter, and caring for his ailing father, officer Marshall struggles to remind himself there's no such thing as werewolves.

Featured Crew

Director, Writer
Producer
Colorist
Supervising Sound Editor
Sound Editor
First Assistant Director
Key Hair Stylist
Production Design
Sound Designer
Producer

Cast

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Jim Cummings
John Marshall
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Riki Lindhome
Julia Robson
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Robert Forster
Sheriff Hadley Marshall
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Chloe East
Jenna Marshall
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Jimmy Tatro
PJ Palfrey
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Laura Coover
Monica Bravo
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Jessica Park
John's Mother
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Annie Hamilton
Brianne Paulson
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Kelsey Edwards
Liz Fairchild

Reviews

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Wuchak
6 | May 08, 2022
_**Grisly slayings in a winter hamlet in Utah**_ An up-and-coming Sheriff (Jim Cummings) wants to prove himself when horrific murders suddenly grip his remote town near Christmas time. Is it an animal, a human or something… else? Robert Forster plays the soon-to-retire dad and Riki Lindhome a subordinate officer. Manly Jimmy Tatro is also on hand. “The Wolf of Snow Hollow” (2020) is a mystery/thriller with horror elements and a zippy sense of black humor. It has the setting of “Donner Pass” (2011), “Snowbeast” (2011) and “Silent Night” (2012), but a different threat mixed with clever amusement. This is a solid piece of full moon entertainment by writer/director/star Jim Cummings. I loved the snowy locations and Chloe East is a highlight on the feminine front, along with Amanda Brown in a small role. Meanwhile the humor is amusing. Yet the flick’s a little too frenetic for its own good. Cummings coulda reigned things in for some more mood, but it’s his movie, not mine. The film runs 1 hour, 25 minutes, and was shot in Kamas, Utah, which is a about 25 miles east of Salt Lake City, on the other side of the mountain range. GRADE: B-/B
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Peter McGinn
7 | Nov 07, 2021
I don’t watch many horror films at all. It just isn’t a genre I care for. The one exception I tend to make is if a horror flick is laced with humor. The Wolf of Snow Hollow has humor, some of it subtle and situational. But as it happens, there was a second reason I wanted to watch this movie, and that is Robert Forster. I have always liked his work, and this is his last film, I believe, and it is dedicated to him in the credits. Without him in it, I would still have watched it. It kept me just interested and entertained enough to stick with it. The ensemble cast does a pretty good job wiyh a reasonable intelligent plot and script. I don’t imagine I will feel compelled to watch it again, but I don’t regret the time it took to watch it once.