Frequency holds your attention from the very beginning to the end with excitement and challenges to your belief system. The theme of time travel is made real, real enough that I believe millions of Americans are going to be educated as to the possibility of not only transcending some of the boundaries of time, but also become more open to the possibilities of: repersonalization (an existing soul's transference into a fetus in a technical manner), rematerialization (soul walk-ins), and other terminology as presented in The Cosmic Family volumes. What seems supernatural very often is a more highly technical process that has been developed on more highly evolved worlds of time and space.
The film was well-written, well-acted, and well-directed. Dennis Quaid did a beautiful job in the role of Frank Sullivan as well as Jim Caviezel who played his adult son Johnny. Even though the theme had a serial killer involvement–which it did not have to–it did not present gory killing scenes.The actor who played the serial killer was also very convincing in his role. If the serial killer element would have been left out of the film and something more beautiful presented, this film could be academy award material. Of course it still could be in the third dimension, but it wouldn't meet the mark in the fourth dimension.
I would still recommend Frequency for its value to raise the consciousness of individuals to other realities such as time travel. Those of us who study the Fifth Epochal Revelation and Continuing do not believe in time travel to the past or the future, for the future is determined upon the decisions of the present, and the past has already happened and cannot be changed. What can be changed is the present moment, which can then alter the outcome in the future.
It is possible to travel in our minds to the past in order to learn from errors that were made, as well as gaining wisdom from what was done right; and it is always good to have a vision of a better future so that our decisions in the moment can be guided by wisdom and hope.
~Van of Urantia*MPAA = Motion Picture Association of America