In a rain-soaked metropolis of the near future, analog technology is outlawed. MAYA (30s), a disgraced former audio engineer, lives in the margins, hoarding magnetic tapes. One night, she stumbles upon a silent carrier wave: FMZM .

Shot on grainy 16mm film with muted blues and deep oranges. The FMZM sequences are presented in stroboscopic negative frames. Sound design is the lead character—clicks, hums, reversed speech, and a 20 Hz sub-bass that mimics a human heartbeat slowing down.

Psychological Sci-Fi / Neo-Noir

You can’t forget a frequency you never heard.

However, if you'd like me to as if "FMZM" were a real film, here’s a creative treatment: Title: FMZM Logline: After a cryptic radio frequency imprints forgotten memories into the minds of listeners, a reclusive sound archivist must decode the signal before it overwrites reality itself.

Teaming up with a rogue philosopher (ZANE) who believes FMZM is the echo of a deleted timeline, Maya must find the source: an abandoned transmission tower where the last words of a forgotten civilization were never erased—only postponed.

It isn't a station. It’s a memory loop. Each time she listens, she lives a death she never died. A war. A drowning. A goodbye she never said. The signal is growing stronger—and it’s bleeding into the real world. Buildings flicker. People vanish from photographs. History is being rewritten from the frequency up.