Something went wrong
Try again later.
Frequency
What if you had the chance to travel back in time and change just one event in your life? An accidental cross-time radio link connects father and son across 30 years. The son tries to save his father's life, but then must fix the consequences.
26 January 1990, California, USA
18 August 1961, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
1976, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
23 August 1991, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
12 April 1976, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada
26 April 1933, Brooklyn, New York, USA
1 July 1962, Chicago, Illinois, USA
8 February 1953, Bari, Puglia, Italy
15 January 1957, Staten Island, New York, USA
December 24, 2010
Scary, tense, grisly mystery-thriller.February 13, 2008
If you see the movie, ask yourself what would be the most upbeat ending possible; you'll see it all and more.June 18, 2002
A fairly wonderful movie about fathers and sons and the mystery of time.September 30, 2005
Good action, lots of suspense, Dennis Quaid, and an intriguing Time Travel concept. What more could you ask?August 15, 2016
It's an appealingly out-there premise that's employed to perpetually captivating effect by filmmaker Gregory Hoblit...May 26, 2006
Like a kid who builds and details a lovely sand castle on the beach and then stomps all over it, the movie is completely destroyed in the last 15 minutes.January 26, 2006
This ambitious but frustrating timeshift thriller never quite manages to jam together two distinct stories.September 24, 2010
Gregory Hoblit's best film generates Spielbergian fascination with temporal drama of twisting timelines, infused with personal conflict and situational tension. It blends "Back to the Future's" rush with "Backdraft's" firefighting and a dash of "Zodiac."March 19, 2002
Movies sometimes end up looking like a head-on collision between opposing impulses. Frequency is that kind of movie.July 21, 2005
Why gripe about a few minor inconsistencies? Just relax and enjoy the show.June 06, 2007
Quaid's buoyant earnestness complements the stunning, low-key performance by Caviezel, whose close-ups give new meaning to the idea that still waters run deep.December 31, 2003
Features plenty of soft-focus, picture-perfect, father-and-son baseball scenes, an enormous amount of plot, and not quite enough of anything else.