Source Code


02:15 am - 04:13 am, Wednesday, October 29 on WXTV MovieSphere Gold (41.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Capt. Colter Stevens travels back in time and inhabits the body of a male passenger on a Chicago train immediately before a deadly explosion, as part of a mission to find the terrorist responsible and prevent another attack.

2011 English HD Level Unknown DSS (Surround Sound)
Action/adventure Drama Mystery Sci-fi Other Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Jake Gyllenhaal (Actor) .. Colter Stevens
Michelle Monaghan (Actor) .. Christina
Vera Farmiga (Actor) .. Goodwin
Jeffrey Wright (Actor) .. Dr. Rutledge
Michael Arden (Actor) .. Derek Frost
Cas Anvar (Actor) .. Hazmi
Russell Peters (Actor) .. Max Denoff
Brent Skagford (Actor) .. George Troxel
Craig Thomas (Actor) .. Gold Watch Executive
Gordon Masten (Actor) .. Conductor
Susan Bain (Actor) .. Nurse
Paula Jean Hixson (Actor) .. Coffee Mug Lady
Lincoln Ward (Actor) .. Minister Sudoku
Kyle Gatehouse (Actor) .. College Student
Albert Kwan (Actor) .. Soda Can Guy
Anne Day Jones (Actor) .. Office Manager
Clarice Byrne (Actor) .. Secretary
James A. Woods (Actor) .. Aviator Glasses Guy
Joe Cobden (Actor) .. Lab Technician
Tom Tammi (Actor) .. CNN Anchor
Matt Holland (Actor) .. Lock Tech
Jasson Finney (Actor) .. M.P.
Kyle Allatt (Actor) .. Aide
Frédérick De Grandpré (Actor) .. Sean Fentress Reflection
Raynald Lapierre (Actor) .. UPG Medic

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Jake Gyllenhaal (Actor) .. Colter Stevens
Born: December 19, 1980
Birthplace: Los Angeles, CA
Trivia: As the offspring of producer/writer Naomi Foner and director Stephen Gyllenhaal, it is not surprising that Jake Gyllenhaal has been acting since childhood. Raised in Los Angeles, Gyllenhaal acted in school plays and made his winsome screen debut when he was in the fifth grade, playing Billy Crystal's son in the blockbuster summer comedy City Slickers (1991). Keeping it in the family while acting with some of the industry's most notable talents, Gyllenhaal subsequently appeared in his parents' 1993 adaptation of the novel A Dangerous Woman with Debra Winger, and played Robin Williams' son in a 1994 episode of TV's Homicide that was directed by his father. Poised to make the transition from child to adult actor, Gyllenhaal earned rave reviews, heralding him as a star in the making, for his emotionally sincere performance as real-life rocket builder Homer Hickam in the warmly received drama October Sky (1999). Though he opted to stay in school and attend college at Columbia University, Gyllenhaal continued his creative pursuits, playing in a rock band and starring as the oddball title character alongside Drew Barrymore in the Barrymore-produced Sundance Film Festival entrant Donnie Darko (2001). Gyllenhaal could be seen later that same year as the titular character in the ill-fated Bubble Boy.After co-starring on the London stage in This Is Our Youth in spring 2002, Gyllenhaal was declared one half of Entertainment Weekly's "It Gene Pool" (with sister Maggie Gyllenhaal) for his aversion to taking the easy, teen flick route. In keeping with his preference for off-center work, Gyllenhaal coincidentally played the younger love object of choice in two consecutive indie comedies, appearing as Catherine Keener's sensitive boss in Nicole Holofcener's slyly witty Lovely & Amazing (2002) and Jennifer Aniston's enticing yet disturbed co-worker in Miguel Arteta's sardonic The Good Girl (2002). As further proof that he had the acting chops to go with his sad-eyed good looks, Gyllenhaal subsequently co-starred with Dustin Hoffman and Susan Sarandon as a young man enmeshed in his dead fiancée's family in Moonlight Mile (2002).With his star on the rise and his status as a heartthrob all but cemented, it became impossible for Gyllenhaal to avoid the draw of a big summer blockbuster. In 2004, he starred alongside Dennis Quaid in the mega-budgeted The Day After Tomorrow, and the success of that film put him in another league altogether. What followed was an interesting, challenging mix of roles for the young actor. He could be seen in the fall of 2005 starring in no less than three high-profile prestige films, all of them adaptations: the delayed big-screen version of the Pulitzer-prize winning play Proof, with Gwyneth Paltrow; the Gulf War memoir Jarhead, directed by American Beauty wunderkind Sam Mendes; and Ang Lee's cowboy romance Brokeback Mountain. The first two films received an indifferent response by critics, even though Jarhead's opening-weekend gross confirmed Gyllenhaal's bankability. Lee's film, however, garnered the most acclaim of 2005, and offered him perhaps his riskiest, most rewarding role to date. Playing the closeted, romantically frustrated rancher Jack Twist, Gyllenhaal added heartbreaking shades of vulnerability to his usual frat-boy cockiness, and more than held his own opposite a memorably gruff, taciturn Heath Ledger. As praise was heaped out upon the film and its two male leads, Gyllenhaal found himself the recipient of a BAFTA award, a National Board of Review notice, and an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Gyllenhaal would spend the next several years enjoying his status as a leading man, appearing in projects like Zodiac, Brothers, Love and Other Drugs, and Source Code.
Michelle Monaghan (Actor) .. Christina
Born: March 23, 1976
Birthplace: Winthrop, Iowa, United States
Trivia: Michelle Monaghan enjoyed a successful modeling career with plans to pursue a career in journalism before a full-time acting career became an option. She'd made some minor appearances on TV shows such as Young Americans and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, as well as some nationally run commercials, but it was a recurring role on the acclaimed series Boston Public in 2002 that really opened doors for the young actress. Over the next few years, she scored big-screen parts in It Runs in the Family, Mr. and Mrs. Smith, and The Bourne Supremacy. She shortly thereafter scored a role alongside Charlize Theron and Frances McDormand in North Country and a starring role in the black comedy Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang with Robert Downey Jr. and Val Kilmer. In 2005, she appeared as the love interest of Tom Cruise in the hotly anticipated Mission: Impossible III, making her a far more familiar face and name. She immediately signed on to next appear in the Ben Affleck film Gone, Baby, Gone, which she followed with a starring role in the critically acclaimed independent film Trucker. She would go on to keep up her interest in the thriller genre, with roles in Eagle Eye in 2008 and Source Code in 2011.
Vera Farmiga (Actor) .. Goodwin
Born: August 06, 1973
Birthplace: New Jersey, United States
Trivia: Even those who fail to recognize her name would instantly know the lithe, slightly diminutive, and ethereally beautiful Ukranian-American actress Vera Farmiga by her distinctive look. Born August 6, 1973, in Passaic County, NJ, to Ukranian immigrant parents Michael and Luba Farmiga, Vera grew up with six brothers and sisters, in an isolated Ukranian enclave -- so isolated that the young girl purportedly did not learn spoken English until the age of six. As a teenager, she attended a Ukranian Catholic secondary school, and spent much of her free time touring with a Ukranian folk dancing troupe. Though she originally planned to build a career as an optometrist, Farmiga instead ventured off in the opposite direction by enrolling as an undergraduate at Syracuse University's School of Visual and Performing Arts. She began to tour as a theatrical performer shortly after graduation, in the American Conservatory Theater's 1996 production of Shakespeare's Tempest, then took her Broadway bow later that same year, as an understudy in David Jones' mounting of Ronald Harwood's Taking Sides. Television work ensued, with spots in such series as Law & Order, Trinity, UC: Undercover, and Touching Evil. At about the same time (around 1998), Farmiga made her rather modest cinematic debut in Sleeping With the Enemy director Joseph Ruben's little-seen Return to Paradise, starring Vince Vaughn and Anne Heche. Many additional roles followed throughout the first years of the new millennium, including that of Lisa, Richard Gere's estranged daughter, in the soapy melodrama Autumn in New York; Lorena, Adrien Brody's unemployment counselor in the Greg Pritikin-helmed 2002 comedy Dummy; and Allison in Eric Schaeffer's fine (albeit overlooked) ensemble film Mind the Gap (2004), where she appears alongside such notables as John Heard and the late Alan King. Farmiga joined the cast of Jonathan Demme's 2004 Manchurian Candidate remake, alongside Denzel Washington, Meryl Streep, and Liev Schreiber; though not among the top-billed performers, the appearance served her career favorably. She fared much better (on all fronts) with a starring role in that same year's visceral indie addiction drama Down to the Bone, winner of the Special Jury Prize at Sundance and a critical darling. As Irene, a coke-addled supermarket checker and mother of two, Farmiga drew raves from such sources as The New York Times and The Village Voice for, in one reviewer's words, "a pitch-perfect performance." (She also reeled in a Los Angeles Film Critics' Association award for that role -- no small accomplishment, indeed.) 2006 brought with it a role as Teresa in Wayne Kramer's thriller Running Scared, and appearances in such features as Anthony Minghella's Breaking & Entering and Martin Scorsese's The Departed (both 2006). The Minghella drama concerns a group of ethnic locals whose lives intersect -- and catalyze violent hostilities -- in the scuzzy King's Cross section of London; as Oana, Farmiga draws heavily on her Eastern European background. In the Scorsese picture, a Beantown cops-and-mobsters crime drama, Farmiga plays Madeleine, the female lead opposite heavyweights Matt Damon, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Jack Nicholson. Meanwhile, Farmiga signed for the role of Fiona, a woman who enters an affair with paraplegic radio personality Isaac (portrayed by In the Bedroom's Nick Stahl) in Carlos Brooks' Quid Pro Quo (2007).In 2009 Farmiga appeared as a mother whose life is threatened by an evil foster child in Orphan, but it was her supporting turn opposite George Clooney in Up in the Air that earned her excellent reviews as well as acting nominations from the Hollywood Foreign Press, the Screen Actors Guild, and the Academy. In the coming years, Farmiga would appear in a host of other acclaimed films, like Source Code and Safe House. Farmiga would also earn massive critical praise for her directorial debut, helming and starring in the 2012 drama Higher Ground.
Jeffrey Wright (Actor) .. Dr. Rutledge
Born: December 07, 1965
Birthplace: Washington, District of Columbia, United States
Trivia: Actor Jeffrey Wright has earned an estimable reputation as one of the most versatile character actors of his generation, both on-stage and onscreen. Jeffrey Wright was born in Washington, D.C., in late 1965. Wright's father died when he was only a year old, and his mother, a lawyer working with the United States Customs Department, raised him with the help of her sister, a nurse. A strong student, Wright attended the prestigious St. Alban's School for Boys in Washington, D.C., and went on to receive a B.A. in Political Science at Amherst College in 1987. While at Amherst, Wright developed an interest in acting, and decided to continue his studies in the Theater department at New York University. While Wright was good enough to win an acting scholarship at N.Y.U., after only two months he opted to strike out on his own as a professional. Roles in off-Broadway plays followed, and Wright scored his first film role in 1990 with a bit part in Presumed Innocent. After a number of television roles and much theater work, in 1994 Wright got his big break when he was cast as Belize, Roy Cohn's nurse, in the acclaimed Broadway drama Angels In America: Perestroika; his performance won him a Tony Award. In 1996, Wright scored a breakthrough film role when he was cast in the lead of Basquiat, delivering a strong performance alongside a veteran cast which included Gary Oldman, Willem Dafoe, Dennis Hopper, Christopher Walken, and Benicio del Toro. A steady flow of character roles followed, including showy supporting work in Celebrity, Ride With the Devil, and Shaft, while Wright gave a compelling performance as Dr. Martin Luther King in the made-for-cable film Boycott. Wright continued to pursue his love of live theater as well, winning an Obie Award in 2002 for his performance (opposite Don Cheadle) in Suzan-Lori Parks' play Topdog/Underdog. Critically-acclaimed screen roles in Lackawanna Blues, Broken Flowers, and Syriana kept Wright on the short list for producers in search of quality supporting players, and by bridging the gap between stage and screen with his multi-tiered role in the acclaimed HBO miniseries Angels in America, the actor would would earn both an Emmy and a Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor. In 2006 Wright could be seen performing opposite Paul Giamatti and Bryce Dallas Howard in director M. NIght Shyamalan's modern fairytale Lady in the Water.
Michael Arden (Actor) .. Derek Frost
Born: October 06, 1982
Birthplace: Midland, Texas, United States
Trivia: Character actor Michael Arden first entered the public eye with a choice supporting role on the prime-time seriocomedy The Return of Jezebel James, created by Gilmore Girls producer Amy Sherman-Palladino. The series, which premiered in winter 2008, told of a children's book editor named Sarah Thomkins (Parker Posey) who turns to her estranged sister, Coco (Lauren Ambrose), for surrogate motherhood when faced with the news that she herself cannot conceive. Arden co-starred as Buddy, Sarah's ambidextrous professional assistant. The show was quickly canceled after only three episodes, but it proved to be a good lauching pad into other screen roles for the Broadway vet. He played a supporting role in Bride Wars (2009), and then joined Charlie Sheen's FX sitcom Anger Management. Arden returned to his theatre roots, directing the Broadway reimagining of Spring Awakening with the Deaf West Theatre, earning him a Tony nomination for Best Direction of a Musical.
Cas Anvar (Actor) .. Hazmi
Birthplace: Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Trivia: Started acting in high school, as the lead role in Hamlet, after his English teacher threatened to fail him if he didn't audition. Is the founding artistic director of Repercussion Theatre, a Montreal-based Shakespeare-in-the-Park touring company that delivered its first performance, A Midsummer Night's Dream, in 1988. A popular video-game voice actor, is known for the roles Altair in Assassin's Creed: Revelations and Dalton in Halo 4. Is fluent in English, French and Farsi. A paintball enthusiast, has competed on a team called The Suave Bastards.
Russell Peters (Actor) .. Max Denoff
Born: September 29, 1970
Brent Skagford (Actor) .. George Troxel
Craig Thomas (Actor) .. Gold Watch Executive
Gordon Masten (Actor) .. Conductor
Susan Bain (Actor) .. Nurse
Paula Jean Hixson (Actor) .. Coffee Mug Lady
Born: August 07, 1968
Lincoln Ward (Actor) .. Minister Sudoku
Kyle Gatehouse (Actor) .. College Student
Albert Kwan (Actor) .. Soda Can Guy
Anne Day Jones (Actor) .. Office Manager
Clarice Byrne (Actor) .. Secretary
James A. Woods (Actor) .. Aviator Glasses Guy
Born: October 30, 1979
Joe Cobden (Actor) .. Lab Technician
Born: October 07, 1978
Tom Tammi (Actor) .. CNN Anchor
Born: September 02, 1945
Matt Holland (Actor) .. Lock Tech
Jasson Finney (Actor) .. M.P.
Kyle Allatt (Actor) .. Aide
Born: September 16, 1978
Frédérick De Grandpré (Actor) .. Sean Fentress Reflection
Pierre Leblanc (Actor)
Raynald Lapierre (Actor) .. UPG Medic

Before / After
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Criminal
11:50 pm