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DVD The Signal
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Storyline On a road trip, Nic and two friends are drawn to an isolated area by a computer genius. When everything suddenly goes dark, Nic regains consciousness – only to find himself in a waking nightmare. |
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Plot Keywords: road trip, girlfriend in a coma, computer hacker, boyfriend girlfriend relationship, abandoned building | |
Details: Country: USA Release Date: 13 June 2014 (Canada) |
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Box Office Budget: $4,000,000 (estimated) |
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4 comments
Saw this at Sundance in January and it was great! It sure didn't look like a film with a 4 million dollar budget!!! Full of suspense, fun, and the ending will blow your mind. It was shot very well – every shot was beautiful (the director worked for Panasonic for years) so it was quite the eye candy. Brenton Thwaites and Lawrence Fishburne made a great team all throughout the movie, and the sets looked great. Looking at the production crew credits, a number of them came over from Breaking Bad, so standards were high… They exceeded every standard of what you can do with a small budget. Very impressed. Looking forward to more from William Eubank!
Just saw it at Sundance! The director was there and answered lots of questions. Can't say a whole lot without spoiling it but Fishburne is pretty awesome. The acting was great and lots of metaphors used. If you like hacker type movies with Internet related stuff, go for this movie. It is also pretty accurate in terms of tech. I am a tech guy and can attest to it. Awesome special effects, apparently done in Canada. I guess it will get into the big movie theatres. I do need to watch it again though. If you get to see it, put in a review and let us know what you think. How does it compare to other sci fi movies you have seen. Apparently it was made on a low budget too and in a very short time span, so this is even more impressive.
In an age where astronomical budgets and A-list stars dominate the sci-fi genre, it's seldom that you stumble across a film that strives to present a unique vision, which is precisely why The Signal is such a breath of fresh air. Directed by Will Eubank (who co-wrote the screenplay), the film follows a trio of MIT students on a cross-country trip, who decide to take a detour in order to track down and expose a malicious hacker.
Arriving at their destination, Nic (Brenton Thwaites) and Jonah (Beau Knapp) find nothing but an abandoned, dilapidated structure. Haley (Olivia Cooke) elects to stay behind as the guys explore the grounds, and just as they stumble across evidence that they're on the right track, all hell breaks loose.
Sometime later, Nic awakens with no memory of the previous events and finds himself trapped in a sterile, hospital-like facility, with Haley in a coma and Jonah held in an adjacent cell. His only point of contact is Damon (Laurence Fishburne), the facility's mysterious administrator, who dons a Hazmat suit for every interaction. Damon wants to know everything about "the signal" – how Nic found it, when he first discovered it – but Nic's only concern is getting himself and his companions to safety.
It's nearly impossible to reveal anything more about the plot without wandering into spoiler territory, but rest assured that The Signal does a spectacular job of approaching familiar sci-fi tropes from a completely different perspective. Eubank spent eight years as a cinematographer, and his experience behind the camera combined with his indie-film sensibilities allow him to get a tremendous amount of mileage out of The Signal's $4 million budget.
The pacing is slow and methodical, doling out information in carefully measured doses before opening the floodgates during the film's climax. There are some truly breathtaking visuals here, particularly during the third act, with one jaw-dropping shot after another building toward a startling mindfuck of a conclusion. If you're tired of seeing Hollywood continually rehashing the same boring sci-fi stories with new faces and bigger budgets, then track down The Signal and buy yourself a ticket. You won't be sorry.
— Brent Hankins
It's a good Sci-fi movie
It looks low budget, but they have some outstanding special effects. It seems that Sci-fi is going back to the character driven stuff that was big in the 1970's. Way more than just some cool effects, the movie centers on the main character, Nick Eastman, an math genus going to MIT who intercepts a hacker's commutation that he and his friend, Marbelle track down while traveling to California to drop off his girlfriend Haley. The situation takes a wild twist when they don't find the Hacker, Nomad, but get caught up in a government quarantine headed up by Dr. Damon played by Laurence Fishburne.
What I like best about the movie is that it has a feel of contemporary times as well. the Science fiction has elements of a superhero movie as they get deeper into Dr. Damon's plot and what an alien presence has to do with it.
The movie does have to stand on the legs of the main character, which could have been a little bit more develop .
Overall, it's Sci-fi worth seeing