A man with telekinetic abilities meets a group of people with similar powers.A man with telekinetic abilities meets a group of people with similar powers.A man with telekinetic abilities meets a group of people with similar powers.
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe train derailment that is shown on the diner's television is from 1993, when Amtrak's Sunset Limited derail off a bridge in Big Bayou Canot near Mobile, Alabama. The bridge was hit by a barge and pushed the bridge out of alignment causing the train to crash.
- GoofsWhen Martin Elias is shot during the armored car robbery, he is hit in the upper right chest area. Later when he is abducted from the hospital by Raymond Addison, the wound has moved to the lower left chest.
- Quotes
Frank McIntyre: The world's full of strange stuff. It all started with those blue M&M's.
- ConnectionsReferences Frogger (1981)
Featured review
Nothing Special
A man with telekinetic abilities meets a group of people with similar powers.
I stumbled upon this film because I was itching for some Zach Galligan. This, unfortunately, was not the film to fill that need. Galligan is a relatively minor player here, with this being a spotlight film for Teri Hatcher (who apparently could only do B-movies ever since "Lois and Clark" ended and until "Desperate Housewives" started).
Honestly, as far as SyFy Channel films go, this one really is not that bad. Rather than exotic scientific junk made up out of thin air (a common theme since "Eureka" became successful), this relies on a very simple scientific principle: friction. I appreciate that.
I stumbled upon this film because I was itching for some Zach Galligan. This, unfortunately, was not the film to fill that need. Galligan is a relatively minor player here, with this being a spotlight film for Teri Hatcher (who apparently could only do B-movies ever since "Lois and Clark" ended and until "Desperate Housewives" started).
Honestly, as far as SyFy Channel films go, this one really is not that bad. Rather than exotic scientific junk made up out of thin air (a common theme since "Eureka" became successful), this relies on a very simple scientific principle: friction. I appreciate that.
helpful•21
- gavin6942
- Mar 25, 2014
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content