· 7 years ago · Sep 18, 2018, 03:08 AM
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52US Marshal Carrie Stetko has been stationed at the Amundsen-Scott Base in Antarctica for two years, and will quit the Marshal service and head home to Miami in a few days. She originally took the job as something mindless to escape a professional situation which made her question her on-the-job judgment. Her plans change when a dead body is found on the ice outside. Upon investigation by the base physician "Doc" John Fury, the dead man was found to be murdered. The dead man is Anton Weiss, one of a crew of three geologists stationed at a nearby base, they who were searching for meteorites. Although it means staying at the base for at least another six months due to an on-coming storm and impending winter, Carrie decides to stay to complete the investigation of the case. Much to her chagrin, the United Nations sends a special envoy, Robert Pryce, to investigate as well, he states because it is the first ever murder in Antarctica which in and of itself warrants special attention, although there are ulterior motives to his participation which he does not initially divulge. Carrie and Robert's first mission is to find the other two geologists who probably know what is going on. But they also have to be mindful that the murderer is still on the loose, he or she by his or her very presence who endangers the lives of all those on the confined base. If they do discover the entire truth, they will find that the motive to the murderer goes deeper than it appears on the surface.
53U.S. Marshal Carrie Stetko is three days from the end of her tour at an international research station in Antarctica after which she'll resign. An incident from her past haunts her. The continent's first winter storm is coming when a body, wearing no gear, is discovered in the tundra. She investigates, soon finds more bodies, and must find a motive and a murderer before the storm and her departure. A U.N. agent, Robert Pryce, appears, seemingly out of nowhere, to help. An aging physician about to retire, a nervous mission chief, a downed Soviet plane, and the weather's deadly elements add to the story. Can Carrie trust Pryce and does she still have what it takes?
54There are some doubtful moments in the film but overall I thought it was an exciting thriller with a good plot. The shower scene in the beginning was a bit out of place for but you can't say it makes the movie bad because it was so easy to forget about as the movie continued, which is why I don't understand the low rating. Maybe people expect too much or they don't follow the dialog carefully enough to take it all in.<br/><br/>As I said the story is good, although a bit messy at times, it provides you with just enough information to capture your interest and curiosity. You want to know what's going on around here. The acting is also good and the environments is an effective place for a thriller like this. Since people are holed up inside research stations most of the time, there isn't really anywhere to run except out into the snowstorm. But the movie has many beautiful scenes despite this. Especially the ending because it was not a typical cliché thriller ending and it made me smile. <br/><br/>Kate Beckinsale as a lead doesn't really shine in her role but still makes a good performance as far as realism goes. You could wish for some more intensity in her acting but then she would outshine the otherwise hollow acting of her colleagues. To sum up, not a perfect movie but still worth the watch.
55US Marshall Carrie Stetko (Kate Beckinsale) is about to return home from her posting to the Antarctic Scoot-Amundsen base before the arrival of bad weather strands the crew for the winter. Unfortunately, a murder victim chooses that particular moment to be discovered, and we are firmly into who-dun-what territory.<br/><br/>For what is essentially a fairly routine murder mystery, Whiteout is consistently entertaining. For a start, the Antarctic setting is unusual and lends both atmosphere and suspense even before the plot is taken into account. The plot, while straightforward, has enough in it to keep you guessing - there wasn't a single element I hadn't encountered before, but the movie was nonetheless solidly constructed in a way to make those familiar elements seem fresh (although the cold light of day reveals that some areas don't bear examining too closely).<br/><br/>And Kate Beckinsale can easily hold centre stage throughout a film like this, striking just the right balance between strength and vulnerability.<br/><br/>I went into this movie expecting to come out thinking "Well, that passed a couple of hours satisfactorily," but I came out thinking "Well, that was noticeably better than I expected."
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57After two years stationed at Antarctica's South Pole research base, lone U.S. Marshal Carrie Stetko (<a href="/name/nm0000295/">Kate Beckinsale</a>) is as anxious as anyone to be going home. She's turned in her resignation and is counting the hours and minutes to the last plane out. But three days before departure, a body turns up on the ice, and Carrie is immediately thrust into Antarctica's first murder investigation. As the death toll mounts, the mystery deepens with shifting loyalties, deadly whiteouts, and a relentless killer who will stop at nothing to protect a secret buried for over 60 years. Now with everyone around her packing up and getting out, Carrie must solve the crime before Antarctica is plunged into six months of darkness and she is stranded with the killer on a land where nothing comes in and no one gets out. Whiteout is adapted from a 4-issue comic-book miniseries written by Greg Rucka with art by Steve Lieber, published by Oni Press in 1998. The story was collected as a graphic novel in 2001. Much of the work at the station revolves around analysing core samples of ice. The Antarctic ice pack has been accumulating for millennia. As it accumulates, gas from the atmosphere is trapped in the ice. By drilling down into the ice and removing core samples, scientists can measure the composition of the atmosphere when the ice first formed. By examining other details of the ice, they can make judgements about temperature levels. Because the ice has been compressed under tons of more ice for millennia, the gas trapped in the ice is extremely compressed. If you put the ice in room temperature water or liquor, this compressed gas escapes, making it look like it is boiling. a5c7b9f00b