Thought Crimes - Deadly thoughts
Movie | |
---|---|
German title | Thought Crimes - Deadly thoughts |
Original title | Thoughtcrimes |
Country of production | Canada |
original language | English |
Publishing year | 2003 |
length | 86 minutes |
Age rating | FSK 12 |
Rod | |
Director | Breck Eisner |
script |
Thomas Dean Donnelly Joshua Oppenheimer |
production | George W. Perkins |
music | Brian Tyler |
camera | Chris Manley |
occupation | |
|
Thought Crimes - Mortal Thoughts ( Thought Crimes ) is a Canadian television - psychological thriller from the year of 2003.
action
Freya McAllister (Navi Rawat) is a perfectly normal teenager - shy and reserved - with very normal future plans. That all changes suddenly when she hears voices for the first time on the night of her prom. Voices that nobody hears except you. There are thousands. Thousands who persistently and inexorably speak to them from all directions. Freya is admitted to a psychiatric clinic for paranoid schizophrenia. She spent the next eight years there lonely and tormented - until that fateful evening on which Dr. Michael Welles shows up. The brilliant biopsychological researcher finally explains to her that she is not crazy but that she has telepathic abilities. The voices in your head are the thoughts of the people around you. With Michael's help, Freya learns how to control her mind and how to turn the supposed curse into a gift.
But Michael is hiding something: He works for the National Security Agency (NSA), the most powerful and secret espionage organization in the world. The NSA finances Freya's training, employs her as a special agent, and assigns her to Agent Brenden Dean of Homeland Security to catch the dangerous terrorist Cazal, whose identity is unknown even to Homeland Security. Together with Dean she manages to uncover the identity of Cazal. She manages to learn important details that lead to a final conviction of Cazal. The end shows Freya as an employee in the service of Homeland Security as a colleague of Brenden, where she is used for special tasks.
background
This thriller was the pilot for a television series that was never made.
Reviews
- According to the Lexicon of International Films , it is "a solidly produced science fiction entertainment with romantic and humorous elements".
Web links
- Thought Crimes - Mortal Thoughts in the Internet Movie Database (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Thought Crimes. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed March 2, 2017 .