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Frequency [Blu-ray]
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Genre | Suspense |
Format | Multiple Formats, Blu-ray, NTSC, Widescreen |
Contributor | Jack McCormack, Elizabeth Mitchell, Daniel Henson, Jim Caviezel, Hawk Koch, Marin Hinkle, Peter MacNeill, Dennis Quaid, Stephen Joffe, Noah Emmerich, Michael Cera, Melissa Errico, Janis Rothbard Chaskin, Andre Braugher, Jordan Bridges, Gregory Hoblit, Toby Emmerich, Robert Shaye, Shawn Doyle, Bill Carraro, Richard Saperstein See more |
Initial release date | 2012-07-10 |
Language | English |
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Product Description
Frequency (BD) A phenomenon allows police officer John Sullivan (Jim Caviezel) to save the life of his long-dead father (Dennis Quaid). But changing the past leads to a string of brutal, serial homicides. Now, they both must race across time to stop the killer.
Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 1.76 ounces
- Item model number : BRN253534
- Director : Gregory Hoblit
- Media Format : Multiple Formats, Blu-ray, NTSC, Widescreen
- Run time : 1 hour and 58 minutes
- Release date : July 10, 2012
- Actors : Dennis Quaid, Jim Caviezel, Andre Braugher, Elizabeth Mitchell, Noah Emmerich
- Producers : Bill Carraro, Richard Saperstein, Robert Shaye, Toby Emmerich, Janis Rothbard Chaskin
- Studio : Studio Distribution Services
- ASIN : B007NQVRNS
- Writers : Toby Emmerich
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #7,846 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #3,848 in Blu-ray
- Customer Reviews:
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REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS
John Sullivan's life was forever altered when his firefighter father Frank was killed in the line of duty in 1969, when John was only 6 years old. John was raised by his widowed nurse mother, Julia, and made his childhood dream of becoming a cop a reality, working homicide under his dad's best friend Satch.
The 36-year-old John (Jim Caviezel) lives in his childhood home, and one night, he and his best friend since childhood Gordo, find Frank's old ham radio. John hooks it up and while fooling around with it, not really expecting anything to come of it, he connects with a faint voice. Initially not knowing who the man is, they talk briefly about baseball. The next night, when that same voice comes across the ham radio even stronger, and asks how John knew exactly what was going to happen in the World Series game that was played that afternoon between the Mets and the Orioles, John tells him it wasn't too tough, since the game happened 30 years ago. A few sentences later, John realizes that somehow, he is talking with father Frank (Dennis Quaid) back in 1969! He tries to prove himself by reminding Frank of Frank's childhood nickname for him (Little Chief) and the song Frank used to sing to him at bedtime every night ("Take Me Out to the Ball Game"), but Frank isn't buying it and thinks some psycho is stalking him and his family. When he threatens to hunt down this phantom voice on the ham radio "until the day I die," John informs him that he already died, in the Buxton fire...which, John soon realizes hasn't happened yet, but WILL happen the next day in 1969!
Frank is still angry and refusing to believe he's talking to his son 30 in the future. John frantically tries to get his father to listen to him, managing to get out, "If you would have just gone the other way, you would have made it!" before losing the connection.
The next day, Frank's company is called to a four-alarm fire at an abandoned warehouse formerly owned by the Buxton company...which gives him pause when he sees the name on the outside of the burning building. Could that nut on the radio have been on to something?
When Frank gets trapped in the flames, he recalls the words from his supposed son--"If you would have just gone the other way, you would have made it!"--and instead of following his instincts, he does indeed go the other way...and does indeed make it out of the building alive, also saving the life of the unconscious runaway teenage girl he went into the building to save in the process.
While this is happening in 1969, at the same time in 1999, John is having a drink with Satch and Gordo at a bar. Gordo toasts to Frank: "Here's to your dad. 30 years ago today." Then suddenly, lightning-flash memories begin flitting through John's brain: John growing up, and his dad is there with him and his mom! Camping trips, Little League games, washing Frank's fire-engine red classic Mustang in the driveway, Frank showing young teens John and Gordo his ham radio. John drops his drink, shattering the glass into a million pieces, and announces to the shocked Satch and Gordo that his father didn't die in a fire. They look at him oddly as Gordo reminds John that John's father died of cancer 10 years ago.
Father and son reconnect on the ham radio that night, with Frank no longer doubting that "the voice of an angel" that "reached right out of Heaven and pulled my butt out of the fire" is his Little Chief, all grown up. Separated by 30 years, but connected by this ham radio, Frank and the grown-up John talk long into the night. You might want to have tissues handy for this part.
John tries to reach his mother Julia (Elizabeth Mitchell) after saying good night to Frank on the ham radio, but gets her answering machine, leaving a message for him to call her. Then he goes to sleep and has a disturbing dream that makes little sense. He is 6 years old again, crying and wearing a black suit and tie, hiding underneath a table covered with a tablecloth and clutching the cross necklace his mother always wears. His mother is nowhere to be found, but their house is filled with people dressed in black and talking quietly and somberly...including a priest. Frank finally finds little Johnny hiding under the table by getting down on the floor, lifting the tablecloth, and seeing his son sitting there in tears, clutching Julia's necklace.
Jarred awake by the disturbing dream, John again tries calling his mother...but an irate voice answers the phone, "Noah's Deli." He hangs up and redials a few seconds later, only to get the same irate voice insisting that this is Noah's Deli.
John gets dressed and goes into work, where Satch (Andre Braugher) follows him into the men's room and lectures him on respect ("You can disrespect yourself all you want, John, but you will NOT disrespect me!") The excavation of a female skeleton has reopened a cold case that John is assigned to: a missing teenage girl from 1969, who turns out to be the first of ten victims of an uncaught serial killer the police tagged The Nightingale Murderer, because, with the exception of the teenage girl, all of his victims were nurses.
When John corrects Satch that there were only three victims, Satch looks at John incredulously and forcefully reminds him that there were ten victims, and John should know that better than anyone...whereupon John attacks the stack of case files on his desk, and while sifting through them, finds a file on his own mother...Julia Sullivan. She was one of The Nightingale Murderer's victims!
John reconnects with Frank on the ham radio that night and breaks the news to him. Frank initially thinks that Julia has just died in 1999, but is horrified when John tells him that no, she's going to be murdered by a serial killer in a few days in 1969. Frank just wants to get Julia and little Johnny the hell out of town, but for John, that's not good enough. There are seven other women that weren't supposed to die. John figures out that because Frank didn't die in the Buxton fire, Julia worked her regular shift at the hospital that night, saving the life of a patient who turned out be The Nightingale Murderer in the process. Frank's chief and the family priest went to the hospital to get her when Frank died, so she wasn't there that night, and the guy died after having killed only three people. But because Frank didn't die after John's warning across time and space, Julia was at the hospital to save the guy, and he went on to kill seven more people, including her!
Father and son team up across time to work together to save the woman they both love, and the other seven victims as well. John is relieved when he reports to Frank that "Carrie Reynolds [one of the victims] is alive and well today because of you, Dad" (since John had the case files and knew where the killer would be and what he would do when he got there, John gave Frank the locations and descriptions of the women; Carrie Reynolds moonlighted as a waitress in a bar and Frank went to the bar the night she was supposed to have been murdered and just hung around until last call, kept her talking, and made sure she got to her car safely, since she was murdered in the alley behind the bar; he didn't see anyone particularly suspicious, he told John).
Things take a turn for the worse, though, when Frank tries to save the second victim, Sissy Clark. She too is moonlighting as a cocktail waitress, but at a different bar than Carrie Reynolds. Frank tries to do for Sissy what he did for Carrie but fails because the killer gets the drop on him in the bar's men's room, knocks him out, and steals his driver's license from his wallet. By the time Frank regains consciousness and gets to Sissy Clark's apartment, she's dead.
Although Frank feels terrible about Sissy Clark, John tells his dad, "Dad, we got him! His prints are on your wallet! Take your wallet and hide it someplace in the house...someplace no one will look for 30 years!" Together they decide that Frank will wrap his wallet in plastic wrap and put it in the dining room window seat, under the loose board inside the window seat. Frank and John maintain their ham radio connection while Frank puts the wallet in the window seat, and John retrieves it 30 years later.
John has gotten a positive ID on the fingerprints in 1999 and discovered that the killer is a reitred cop named Jack Shepard. He has a tense verbal confrontation with Shepard in a bar. Shepard's mother, a nurse, was murdered years ago. "If they had known your mother was nightingale, they would have looked closer at the family, Jack. They would have looked at you." Shepard asks John what he's looking at. "Stealing your life away," John replies. "You went down 30 years ago, pal. You just don't know it yet."
John is relating this to Frank via the ham radio when Satch shows up at the Sullivans' in 1969 with a couple of uniformed officers to take Frank down to the station, because his driver's license was found under Sissy Clark's dead body. Frank physically fights Satch not to be taken from his family, and once he is dragged down to the police station, Satch tells him that unless he can come up with an explanation for how his driver's license ended up under this dead girl, they're going to make him for Sissy Clark's murder. So Frank tells Satch the truth: John, the ham radio, the 30 years' time difference, all of it. Of course Satch doesn't believe it. But Frank, John, and Satch all three were die-hard Mets fans, and this was 1969, the year of the Amazin' Mets' World Series win, and John described every game in detail to Frank even though Frank himself had only seen the first two. The day Frank is hauled down to the police station is the day of the last game of the World Series, the game which featured the world-famous shoe polish pitch: the ball hit batter Cleon Jones on the shoe, getting a smear of polish on it, and Mets manager Gil Hodges insisted, on the basis of the shoe polish on the ball, that Jones be awarded first base because he was hit by the pitch. "You just go and watch the game, and if it don't happen, then I'm a liar!" Frank challenges Satch while also dropping Jack Shepard's name as the real killer and insisting he knows it's true because John told him...on the radio, from the future...that the fingerprints match.
Meanwhile, Julia Sullivan has tracked Satch down, demanding answers about why he dragged her husband and his best friend out of their house in front of 6-year-old Johnny and Gordo. But Satch is too distracted by the ball game to give Julia many answers or much comfort...and when he sees the Cleon Jones shoe polish pitch and Jones trotting to first base, he realizes that Frank was telling the truth after all!
Frank manages to escape from the police station by setting off the fire alarm (he is a firefighter, after all) while Satch (and most of the rest of the precinct) are watching the game, and he goes after the killer himself. Now knowing Frank is innocent, and willing to check out Shepard, Satch and his partner break into Shepard's apartment after Frank and Shepard have already had a fight there. Satch and his partner follow after them, finally finding them at the river, where it appears that, in a literal fight to the death, Frank has killed Jack Shepard.
Frank is allowed to go home to his family, while police divers suit up in scuba gear to search the river for Shepard's body. Frank fixes the ham radio, which got broken when he knocked it off the table when Satch and the uniforms dragged him out of there earlier in the afternoon, and he is able to contact John in 1999 and tell him that it's over.
John looks around his house, though, and his eyes fall upon the family pictures: pictures of just him and Frank and their dalmatian dog Elvis. "If Mom's okay, then where is she?" John asks plaintively.
"But...I killed him," Frank says, puzzled.
And it is in that moment that Jack Shepard shows up to the house in both 1969 and 1999, ready to kill every Sullivan he finds in both years! Can Frank in 1969, and John in 1999, finally put an end to Shepard once and for all, without losing either of their lives, or the life of their beloved wife and mother Julia, in the process?
If you're a fan of sci-fi, if you like mysteries, or if you enjoy father/son relationship stories, and you haven't seen Frequency yet, you're really missing out on a FABULOUS movie.
The story bounds seamlessly between 1999 and 1969, when the aurora borealis cause a tear in time that allows Quaid to talk to his son(Caviezel) via a ham radio. Caviezel manages to tell his father how he will die and what he must do to avoid it. The result is a twist and turn of happenings that wouldn't have occurred if Quaid would have died as originally planned. With new events underway that make significant changes in the lives of the entire family, Quaid and his son begin to work together in order to set time right. I won't say much more than that about the plot, so that I don't give too much away.
Quaid is solid as the lead character, Frank Sullivan. Caviezel does a great job as Frank's son, John. The rest of the cast, especially Andre Braugher, do an excellent job. The story moves at a good pace and there is plenty of action for folks who crave it.
The science fiction is key to the story, but this feels more like a drama than a sci-fi flick. Also, the background story that ties the entire film together, the run of the Amazin' Mets of 69, is brilliant to watch unfold(even though the end result is pretty obvious).
I consider this flick a wonderful edition to anyone's collection who enjoys suspenseful drama, science fiction with a little twist, or baseball.
Highly recommended.
Top reviews from other countries
Film war auf englisch!
Ich kenne den Film und finde ihn sehr gut .
Il faut perdre son père