Frozen Stupid

Frozen Stupid
Written by Richard Brauer
Directed by Richard Brauer
Starring Ernest Borgnine
Joey Albright
Kimberly Guerrero
Michelle Mountain
Randall Godwin
Will David Young
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
Production
Producer(s) Richard Brauer
Editor(s) Jeffrey T. Morgan
Cinematography Richard Brauer
Running time 102 minutes
Distributor Inferno Film Productions LLC
Release
Original release
  • August 2008 (2008-08)

Frozen Stupid is a 2008 comedy television film starring Ernest Borgnine, Joey Albright, and Kimberly Guerrero, with Michelle Mountain, Randall Godwin, and Will David Young.[1] The film was directed, written, and produced by Richard Brauer.[2]

Plot

On a snowy Saturday, in a midwestern winter landscape, Tony Norgard (Joey Albright) desperately wants to go ice fishing. But he is pressured to attend his mother-in-law's birthday party on the same day. To resolve the dilemma, Tony pretends to be sick and stays in bed. While his little white lie allows him the chance for a secret outing, it comes with a heavy price. Through the day, misfortune seems to meet him at every turn. When he meets up with his dad Frank (Ernest Borgnine), things get worse. Tony's lie seems to have put a curse on what should otherwise have been a simple day of fishing for everyone. Unaware of the charade, Tony's wife Lila (Michelle Mountain) happily goes about her day, sorry that her husband is at home, sick in bed, missing a great weekend of family fun. Tony befriends the spirited and very independent Stormy, (Kimberly Norris), a beautiful, yet rugged ice fisherwoman. Stormy becomes one of the many unusual characters Tony meets in this frozen lake community of anglers. Through it all, even Tony is dwarfed by the magnitude of his compounding troubles. But he is an optimistic man and in his own way tries to put the best spin on the mess he has created. With hopeful confidence, Lila somehow manages to see past his ice-fishing antics. She remembers the honorable man she married, and armed with large amounts of grace, remains supportive. This comedy tells the tale of a cantankerous father and his bumbling but well-meaning son who share a joyous obsession for the age-old art of ice fishing.[3]

References

External links


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