White Noise (2005)
An architect's desire to speak with his wife from beyond the grave using EVP (Electronic Voice Phenomenon), becomes an obsession with supernatural repercussions.
White Noise (2005)
Information
Released Year: 2005
Runtime: 101 minutes
Directors: Geoffrey Sax
Writers: Steve Martin
Casts: Keegan Connor Tracy, Benita Ha, Aaron Douglas, Mike Dopud, Michael Keaton, Ian McNeice, Miranda Frigon, Bruce Dawson, Suzanne Ristic, Deborah Kara Unger, Nicholas Elia, Brad Sihvon, April Telek, Sarah Strange, L. Harvey Gold, Marsha Regis, Chandra West, Amber Rothwell, Mitchell Kosterman, Anthony Harrison
IMDB: White Noise (2005)
Storyline
An architect's desire to speak with his wife from beyond the grave using EVP (Electronic Voice Phenomenon), becomes an obsession with supernatural repercussions.
Trailer
Reviews
|
The Hollywood Reporter -
Geoffrey Sax, a British television director making his theatrical debut, lavishes enough craft on the paranormal thriller to send more than a few chills down the spine.
|
|
Dallas Observer -
There's nothing at all scary about White Noise, which goes bump in the night so often it's easy to mistake it for clumsy.
|
|
Christian Science Monitor -
Beneath its regrettably banal surface, White Noise raises the creepy question of whether intimidating, even malign forces may be lurking in those fancy gadgets that fill our living rooms and offices.
|
|
Philadelphia Inquirer -
Has a low-key tone that works in its favor for a time.
|
|
Entertainment Weekly -
What might have been a rote horror exercise becomes instead a twitchy, mannered, often amusing rote horror exercise.
|
Related Movies
An architect's desire to speak with his wife from beyond the grave using EVP (Electronic Voice Phenomenon), becomes an obsession with supernatural repercussions.
An architect's desire to speak with his wife from beyond the grave using EVP (Electronic Voice Phenomenon), becomes an obsession with supernatural repercussions.
An architect's desire to speak with his wife from beyond the grave using EVP (Electronic Voice Phenomenon), becomes an obsession with supernatural repercussions.
An architect's desire to speak with his wife from beyond the grave using EVP (Electronic Voice Phenomenon), becomes an obsession with supernatural repercussions.