The Signal

The Signal

2007103 min
5.9/10
HorrorScience FictionThriller

Plot Summary

A horror film told in three parts, from three perspectives, in which a mysterious transmission that turns people into killers invades every cell phone, radio, and television.

▶️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (11)

Anessa Ramsey

Anessa Ramsey

Mya Denton

Justin Welborn

Justin Welborn

Ben Capstone

AJ Bowen

AJ Bowen

Lewis Denton

Scott Poythress

Scott Poythress

Clark

Sahr Ngaujah

Sahr Ngaujah

Rod

Lindsey Garrett

Lindsey Garrett

Laura

Chad McKnight

Chad McKnight

Jim Parsons

No Image

Christopher Thomas

Ken

No Image

Matthew Stanton

Jerry

Suehyla El-Attar Young

Suehyla El-Attar Young

Janice

David Bruckner

David Bruckner

Screaming Man

🎬Crew

Director

Jacob Gentry

Writers

Jacob Gentry, David Bruckner, Dan Bush

Producers

Morris Ruskin, Alexander Motlagh, Hilton Garrett, Jacob Gentry

🖼️Gallery (5 images)

The Signal backdrop 1
The Signal backdrop 2
The Signal backdrop 3
The Signal backdrop 4
The Signal backdrop 5

💬Reviews (1)

B

bigbassdrum

5/15/2016

The Signal addresses the ills caused in our world by the mainstream media, governments and corporations controlling people through fear; playing people off against each other as a smoke screen to the truth and as a tactic to diminish opposition to a world elite with a fascist agenda, manufacturing people's consent to nefarious actions. The signal beams through TVs and radios, causing fear and paranoia. Almost no-one is truly sure of anyone else or their motives. Fear, leading to hate, anger and violence. The true horror of this film is that it is an accurate take on our world, only amplified to make its point. However, The Signal is not merely a bleak film with no answers to the horrors expressed. It provides hope and shows that love, support and trust are a remedy to the induced madness; a shared psychosis based on brainwashing. It makes the case well for community over individualism, solidarity, substance over style, questioning, understanding, and hope instead of hate. It does this through characters and situations that, although amplified, are poignant and credible reflections of our own societies. If you like thoughtful horror films which make important points rather than the sheer pointless butchery of films like Saw, I highly recommend pulling the aerial out of the back of the TV and watching The Signal.

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Production Companies

Shoreline Entertainment