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White Noise |
Starring:
Michael Keaton,
Ian McNeice,
Deborah Kara
Unger,
Chandra West,
Sarah Strange,
Aaron Douglas,
Keegan Connor
Tracy,
Mike Dopud,
Nicholas Elia,
Miranda Frigon,
Mitchell
Kosterman,
April Telek |
In the 1920s,
Thomas Edison speculated that a
device would be created which would
allow humans to conduct
conversations with the dead.
In the 1970s,
Sarah Estep picked up some
mysterious voices on her husband's
reel-to-reel tape recorder, and set
up the American Association of
Electronic Voice Phenomena (EVP) to
help track the phenomenon. In 2005,
following a welter of evidence
gathered by Estep and others, EVP
forms the backbone for director
Geoffrey Sax's shocking feature film
WHITE NOISE. Architect Jonathan
Rivers (Michael Keaton) has little
time to mourn the passing of his
wife Anna (Chandra West) when he
starts receiving signals from her. A
faint sound of her voice is caught
by Rivers in radio static on the
night of her death, followed by
incessant cell phone calls coming
from Anna's old number. Rivers is
convinced he can hear Anna's voice
saying "go, Jon" to him in the
resulting calls. With a little help
from expert EVP practitioner Raymond
Price (Ian McNeice), Rivers contacts
Anna and begins a hazy dialect with
her. From the garbled dialogue
Rivers receives, he deduces that
Anna is sending him to save the
lives of people who are about to die.
This joins Rivers, in his plight,
with a former client of Price's,
Sarah Tate (Deborah Kara Unger).
However, meddling with messages from
the dead leads the pair into a world
of trouble, producing some
startlingly anxious moments, and a
spine-chilling forewarning of the
possible consequences facing
real-life users of EVP. |
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