DVD - Wide Screen / Dolby 5.1 / Stereo Learn more
Enter a zip code
Widescreen version of the film; 5.1 Stereo Surround; 2.0 Stereo Surround Sound; English subtitles and closed captions; Deleted scenes; Original documentary: "The Science and Technology Behind Frequency" in 5.1 audio and enhanced for widescreen TVs; Feature-length commentary with director Gregory Hoblit; Feature-length commentary with actor Noah Emmerich and writer/producer Toby Emmerich; 5.1 isolated score with composer commentary by Michael Kamen; Theatrical trailer; Animated solar galleries; Script-to-screen dynamic index; Original web site; "Lord of the Rings" web browser, wallpaper, and screen saver; Fully-playable demo of Sierra studios "Ground Control" game
Full Product DetailsScene Selections
0. Scene Selections
1. Main Titles [7:00]
2. October 10, 1069 [4:06]
3. October 10, 1999 [5:22]
4. On the Air [5:27]
5. The Ball Game [1:35]
6. History Lesson [1:47]
7. 30 Years Ago [7:37]
8. The Buxton Fire [10:49]
9. Catching Up [10:14]
10. Repercussions [6:40]
11. "Something Happened" [3:51]
12. Hunting the Nightingale [6:15]
13. Suspect and Victim [5:45]
14. Evidence [1:45]
15. Skeletons in the Closet [2:10]
16. Under Suspicion [:45]
17. Detained [4:34]
18. Last Flight of the Nightingale [3:07]
19. Safe at Home [10:09]
20. Return of the Nightingales [4:30]
21. The Sullivans/End Titles [2:22]
With a nod to movies past, Frequency synthesizes style and fright to create a thriller for the ages. A freak occurrence in the aurora borealis rewrites the future for John Sullivan (James Caviezel), a policeman still recovering from the death of his father (Dennis Quaid), a heroic fireman, 30 year earlier. Using his father's old ham radio one night, John connects with a strangely familiar man -- eerily, but unmistakably, his father. This fantastic connection inadvertently alters past, present, and future for both of them, as father and son must reunite to stop a serial killer who has targeted John's mother. Quaid brings his usual charm to the fatherly role, and Caviezel, best remembered for his breakout role in The Thin Red Line, makes a great, moody foil. Screenwriter Toby Emmerich's script is tight and multilayered, allowing director Gregory Hoblit to successfully revisit the psychological terror he mastered in Fallen and Primal Fear. With great ease, Hoblit juggles an amalgam of genres -- thriller, science fiction, and family drama -- recalling the uncanny fantasy of The Twilight Zone and Field of Dreams as much as the suspense of Backdraft and The Fugitive. Patricia Kim O'Cone, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations