

If you have about an hour and you want to feel grateful for your heater, you should watch Igloo. It came out in 1932. It’s old, it’s grainy, and it’s basically a survival horror movie where the monster is just winter. History buffs will love it. People who like seeing how things were actually done before green screens ...
Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Ewing Scott

Edward LeSaint
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"If you have about an hour and you want to feel grateful for your heater, you should watch Igloo. It came out in 1932. It’s old, it’s grainy, and it’s basically a survival horror movie where the monster is just winter. History buffs will love it. People who like seeing how things were actually done before green screens will love it too. If you hate slow movies or black-and-white footage of people walking on ice, you will probably be bored out of your mind within ten minutes. I wasn’t sure what to..."
Mala
Wilfred Dunn, Ewing Scott, Richard Cahoon, Sydney Singerman, Edward T. Lowe Jr.
United States
Charles Horan

