Exoticalot
People are voting emotionally.
Numerootno
A story that's too fascinating to pass by...
Blake Rivera
If you like to be scared, if you like to laugh, and if you like to learn a thing or two at the movies, this absolutely cannot be missed.
Juana
what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
sophieriley
I watched all the episodes of Frequency on Netflix. I found them very entertaining. I liked the plot the actors and binged all episodes in three days I thought this was one of the best things I watched on TV this summer I wish it had been on one of the regular stations I think it would have been renewed CW made a bad mistake not renewing and giving it a better time to watch. I think I missed it because it competed with something else on main stations I only found it on Netflix when a relative suggested I try it he said it was good I agree I it was excellent
snowyprecipice
I'd give a 7.5 but you can't do that on IMDb. It started out pretty good but I couldn't help making comparisons to Signal (a korean thriller-mystery series with a similar premise) and the latter is superior by far. Also I was annoyed that anyone could think Frank beat up Joe in the interrogation room. Just check his knuckles; if they aren't raw and red it's obvious he didn't do anything.
dlordmagic
After watching the first episode, since it got released to Netflix, all I could really say is Holy crappy flying tentacles Batman.Its probably the best mesh up of two distinct time concepts that I have seen thus far. One aspect reminds me of the campy love story movie Lakehouse where Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock communicate across time by mailbox. The other aspect reminds me of the Butterfly effect, where subtle changes in the past muck up the present. Creating that Back to the Future motive of needing to fix things to restore the present. Will be interesting to see how the show manages to progress the story without being limited by the radio communication.
SnoopyStyle
Raimy Sullivan (Peyton List) is a NYPD detective following in her father Frank (Riley Smith)'s footsteps. She is still haunted by his murder in 1996 as an undercover cop and rumors of his corruption. His mother Julie is still living in the family home. A lighting strike reactivates Frank's ham radio. Raimy starts communicating with her father from 20 years ago. Her warning leads Frank to avoid his murder but the change in timeline changes many things. Her father died later, her mother was killed by serial killer Nightingale, and her boyfriend Daniel Lawrence never met her. Satch Reyna (Mekhi Phifer) is her supervisor and was her father's partner. As the father and daughter team tries to catch Nightingale, Raimy finds more alterations in her present day situation.The movie is solid sci-fi drama. The TV show adaptation tries to stretch it out with some monkey-wrenches thrown in. It feels overly extended. It would work for a shorter mini-series. The split time era is also problematic, more so than in the movie. I don't see why this needs a second season.