Total Recall


10:20 am - 12:15 pm, Thursday, November 27 on MGM+ Marquee HDTV (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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Futuristic thriller about a man whose memories may not be real.

1990 English
Action Drama Action/adventure Sci-fi Guy Flick Other Paranormal

Cast & Crew
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Arnold Schwarzenegger (Actor) .. Doug Quaid
Rachel Ticotin (Actor) .. Melina
Sharon Stone (Actor) .. Lori Quaid
Ronny Cox (Actor) .. Vilas Cohaagen
Michael Ironside (Actor) .. Richter
Marshall Bell (Actor) .. George/Kuato
Michael Champion (Actor) .. Helm
Ray Baker (Actor) .. McClane
Roy Brocksmith (Actor) .. Dr. Edgemar
Rosemary Dunsmore (Actor) .. Dr. Lull
David Knell (Actor) .. Ernie
Alexia Robinson (Actor) .. Tiffany
Dean Norris (Actor) .. Tony
Mark Carlton (Actor) .. Bartender
Debbie Lee Carrington (Actor) .. Thumbelina
Lycia Naff (Actor) .. Mary
Robert Costanzo (Actor) .. Harry
Michael LaGuardia (Actor) .. Stevens
Ken Strausbaugh (Actor) .. Immigration Officer
Marc Alaimo (Actor) .. Everett
Michael Gregory (Actor) .. Rebel Lieutenant
Ken Gilden (Actor)
Mickey Jones (Actor) .. Burly Miner
Parker Whitman (Actor) .. Martian Husband
Ellen Gollas (Actor) .. Martian Wife
Gloria Dorson (Actor) .. Woman in Phone Booth
Benny Corral (Actor) .. Punk Cabbie
Bob Tzudiker (Actor) .. Doctor
Erik Cord (Actor) .. Lab Assistant
Frank Kopyc (Actor) .. Technician
Paula McClure (Actor) .. Newscaster
Rebecca Ruth (Actor) .. Reporter
Milt Tarver (Actor) .. Commercial Announcer
Roger Cudney (Actor) .. Agent
Monica Steuer (Actor) .. Mutant Mother
Sasha Rionda (Actor) .. Mutant Child
Linda Howell (Actor) .. Tennis Pro
Priscilla Allen (Actor) .. Fat Lady
Ken Gildin (Actor) .. Hotel Clerk
Robert Picardo (Actor) .. Voice of Johnnycab
Kamala Lopez (Actor) .. Additional Voices
Morgan Lofting (Actor) .. Additional Voices
Karlyn Michelson (Actor) .. Additional Voices
Dave Nicolson (Actor) .. Scientist

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Arnold Schwarzenegger (Actor) .. Doug Quaid
Born: July 30, 1947
Birthplace: Thal, Austria
Trivia: While his police-chief father wanted him to become a soccer player, Austrian-born actor Arnold Schwarzenegger opted instead for a bodybuilding career. Born July 30, 1947, in the small Austrian town of Graz, Schwarzenegger went on to win several European contests and international titles (including Mr. Olympia) and then came to the U.S. for body-building exhibitions, billing himself immodestly but fairly accurately as "The Austrian Oak." Though his thick Austrian accent and slow speech patterns led some to believe that the Austrian Oak was shy a few leaves, Schwarzenegger was, in fact, a highly motivated and intelligent young man. After graduating from the University of Wisconsin with a degree in business and economics, he invested his contest earnings in real estate and a mail-order bodybuilding equipment company.A millionaire before the age of 22, Schwarzenegger decided to try acting. Producers were impressed by his physique but not his mouthful of a last name, so it was as Arnold Strong that he made his film bow in the low-budget spoof Hercules in New York (1970, with a dubbed voice). He reverted to his own name for the 1976 film Stay Hungry, then achieved stardom as "himself" in the 1977 documentary Pumping Iron. In The Villain (1979), a cartoon-like Western parody, he played "Handsome Stranger," exhibiting a gift for understated comedy that would more or less go unexploited for many years thereafter. With Conan the Barbarian (1982) and its sequel, Conan the Destroyer (1984), the actor established himself as an action star, though his acting was backtracking into two-dimensionality (understandably, given the nature of the Conan role). As the murderous android title character in The Terminator (1984), Schwarzenegger became a bona fide box-office draw, and also established his trademark of coining repeatable catchphrases in his films: "I'll be back," in Terminator, "Consider this a divorce," in Total Recall (1990), and so on.As Danny De Vito's unlikely pacifistic sibling in Twins (1988), Schwarzenegger received the praise of critics who noted his "unsuspected" comic expertise (quite forgetting The Villain). In Kindergarten Cop (1991), Schwarzenegger played a hard-bitten police detective who found his true life's calling as a schoolteacher (his character was a cop only because it was expected of him by his policeman father, which could have paralleled his own life). Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), wherein Schwarzenegger exercised his star prerogative and insisted that the Terminator become a good guy, was the most expensive film ever made up to its time -- and one of the biggest moneymakers. The actor's subsequent action films were equally as costly; sometimes the expenditures paid off, while other times the result was immensely disappointing -- for the box-office disappointment Last Action Hero (1992), Schwarzenegger refreshingly took full responsibility, rather than blaming the failure on his production crew or studio as other "superstars" have been known to do.A rock-ribbed Republican despite his marriage to JFK's niece, Maria Shriver (with whom he has four children), Schwarzenegger was appointed by George Bush in 1990 as chairman of the President's Council of Physical Fitness and Sports, a job he took as seriously and with as much dedication as any of his films. A much-publicized investment in the showbiz eatery Planet Hollywood increased the coffers in Schwarzenegger's already bulging bank account. Schwarzenegger then added directing to his many accomplishments, piloting a few episodes of the cable-TV series Tales From the Crypt as well as a 1992 remake of the 1945 film Christmas in Connecticut.Schwarzenegger bounced back from the disastrous Last Action Hero with 1994's True Lies, which, despite its mile-wide streak of misogyny and its gaping plot and logic holes, was one of the major hits of that summer's movie season. Following the success of True Lies, Schwarzenegger went back to doing comedy with Junior, co-starring with Emma Thompson and his old Twins accomplice Danny De Vito. The film met with critically mixed results, although it fared decently at the box office. Undeterred, Schwarzenegger continued down the merry, if treacherous, path of alternating action with comedy with 1996's Eraser and Jingle All the Way, the latter of which proved to be both a critical bomb and a box-office disappointment. In a move that suggested he had realized that audiences wanted him back in the world of assorted weaponry and explosives, Schwarzenegger returned to the action realm with 1997's Batman & Robin, which unfortunately proved to be a huge critical disappointment, although, in the tradition of most Schwarzenegger action films, it did manage to gross well over 100 million dollars at the box office and over 130 million dollars more the world over.The turn of the century found Schwarzenegger's star losing some of its luster with a pair of millennial paranoia films, 1999's End of Days and 2000's The 6th Day. The former film -- in which a security consultant has to save the world from Satan -- was critically lambasted and, despite a powerful opening weekend, failed to recoup its cost in the States. The latter film -- a cloning parable which bore more than a passing resemblance to Total Recall -- received more positive notices, but took in less than half the receipts Days did just one year prior. Perhaps as a response to these failures, Schwarzenegger prepped three films reminiscent of former successes, all scheduled for release in 2001 and 2002: the terrorist action thriller Collateral Damage, True Lies 2, and the long-anticipated Terminator 3. Though Collateral Damage received a chilly reception at the box office and the development of True Lies 2 fell into question, longtime fans of the cigar-chomping strongman rejoiced when Arnold resumed his role as a seriously tough cyborg in Terminator 3. Though he made a cameo in director Frank Coraci's adaptation of Around the World in 80 Days, Arnold's most notable role of the new millenium was political -- Schwarzenegger replaced Gray Davis as governor of California in the highly controversial recall election of 2003.In 2010, Schwarzenegger played the character of Trench in The Expendables, an action thriller following a group of tough-as-nails mercinaries as they deal with the aftermath of a mission gone wrong, and reprised the role for The Expendables 2 in 2012.
Rachel Ticotin (Actor) .. Melina
Born: November 01, 1958
Trivia: Anglo-Latino actress Rachel Ticotin made her first film appearance in a bit role in 1978's King of the Gypsies. Rachel has since contributed well-rounded characterizations in a number of stage and TV productions, as well as a handful of films. She made one of her most vivid cinematic impressions as Melina, Arnold Schwarzenegger's "can she be trusted?" vis-a-vis in 1992's Total Recall. On television, Rachel was seen as Puerto Rican non-com Grave Pravlik in the military drama For Love and Honor (1983), DA Teresa Storm on the Pat Morita detective weekly Ohara (1987) and as LAPD detective Annette Ray on Crime & Punishment. Rachel Ticotin is married to actor David Caruso.
Sharon Stone (Actor) .. Lori Quaid
Born: March 10, 1958
Birthplace: Meadville, Pennsylvania
Trivia: Screen siren, opinionated diva, and one of the few actresses in Hollywood who can claim to be both a Paul Verhoeven muse and a MENSA member, Sharon Stone is nothing if not a legend in her own right. Beginning with her notorious disinclination to wear underwear during a police interrogation in Basic Instinct, Stone went on to become one of the most talked about actresses of the '90s, earning both admiration and infamy for her on- and off-screen personae.Almost as famous as Stone's glamorous image are her working-class roots. Born in the Northwest Pennsylvania town of Meadville on March 10, 1958, Stone grew up a bookworm in a large family. Highly intelligent in addition to being a local beauty pageant queen, she won a scholarship to Pennsylvania's Edinboro University when she was 15 years old. After studying creative writing and fine arts, she decided to pursue a modeling career, and after moving to New York, she signed on with the Eileen Ford agency. Stone became a successful model by the late '70s, appearing in print and television ads for Clairol, Revlon, and Diet Coke.In 1980, Stone branched out into acting, making her screen debut as the "pretty girl on train" in Woody Allen's Stardust Memories. Following this role, she spent the '80s appearing in one forgettable film after another, often cast as the stereotypical blonde bimbo. She finally got a break in 1990, when she appeared as Arnold Schwarzenegger's kickboxing secret-agent wife in Verhoeven's Total Recall. Any recognition she gained for that role, however, was more than eclipsed by the notoriety she earned for her starring turn in her second Verhoeven feature, Basic Instinct. The 1992 film, in which Stone portrayed a bisexual author/sexual adventurer who may or may not be a serial killer, did her a huge favor by making her a star but also a sizable disservice by further typecasting her in blonde seductress roles. Stone's subsequent effort, the erotic thriller Sliver (1993), was an example of this: the actress attracted notice less for her acting than for her willingness to simulate masturbation. Her role in the following year's The Specialist was also fairly limiting -- an action flick co-starring Sylvester Stallone, it called for Stone to run around in a tight dress in heels when she wasn't seducing various characters.In 1995, Stone managed to break into the "serious actress" arena with her performance in Martin Scorsese's Casino. Cast as an ex-prostitute, she won an Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe for her work, as well as the general opinion that she was capable of dramatic acting. Stone branched out further that same year with The Quick and the Dead, a revisionist Western directed by Sam Raimi in which she starred as a tough-talking, hard-drinking broad bent on revenge. Unfortunately, the film was a relative flop, as were her subsequent 1996 films, Diabolique, a remake of the 1954 French film by Clouzot and Last Dance, a drama that featured Stone as a woman on death row. By this point winning more notice for her off-screen role as an arbiter of fashion and old-school Hollywood glamour than for her onscreen acting work, Stone next lent her voice to the animated Antz in 1998. The film proved to be a success, unlike the actress's other projects that year, the lackluster Barry Levinson sci-fi thriller Sphere and The Mighty. The latter film, which Stone produced as well as starred in, was a heartfelt story about two adolescent misfits; although it did win a number of positive reviews, audiences largely kept their distance. The same couldn't be said of Stone's next film, a 1999 remake of Gloria; not only did audiences stay away from it, critics savaged it with vituperative glee. Never one to let a bad review get her down, Stone soon rebounded, receiving a more positive reception for her performance in The Muse and then starring as Jeff Bridges' long-suffering wife in Simpatico. If her roles in the years that followed weren't as high profile, that's certainly not to say that they were any less challenging. After taking a turn towards the small screen in the lesbian-themed made-for-cable drama If These Walls Could Talk 2, Stone broke for comedy with Alfonso Arau's Picking Up the Pieces and essayed the role of an unpredictable bad girl in Beautiful Joe (all 2000). Having veered increasingly towards family-oriented fare in recent years, the trend continued with vocal work for Harold and the Purple Crayon. Of course, all was not child's play in Stone's career, and with the release of Cold Creek Manor the following year, audiences were indeed in for a frightful chill. A series of continual highs and lows marked Stone's career path in successive years. In 2004, the actress appeared as Laurel Hedare opposite Halle Berry in Catwoman. Though eagerly anticipated, the effects-heavy vehicle opened that July to abysmal reviews and devastating box office returns. Despite Stone's confession that she was toning down her oft cited diva-like ways after suffering a brain aneurysm in 2001, rumors of outrageous behavior on the film's set began to circulate. She fared much better on all fronts when she essayed a role as one of Bill Murray's ex-girlfriends in Jim Jarmusch's Golden Palm winner Broken Flowers (2005) - and walked away with the most memorable and endearing role in the picture - a role that showcases her skills as a disciplined thespian. Stone then contributed a cameo (as did many stars) to that same year's disappointing Martin Short vehicle Jiminy Glick in LaLa Wood Early 2006 gave rise to another embarrassment, as Stone appeared (at the age of 48!) in the sequel Basic Instinct 2: Risk Addiction. Despite a somewhat respectable pedigree (the gifted Michael Caton-Jones helmed the picture) the public and press scoffed. Incredibly, Stonespoke of a possible third entry in the franchise, and even explored the option of assuming the position of director. No such luck: much to the chagrin of viewers who relish Hollywood stars in humi roles, the picture failed to materialize. But soon after, a couple of potential triumphs surfaced, defiantly challenging the tabloids hungry for a 'losing streak' in Stone's career. She joined an exemplary cast in Emilio Estevez's hotly anticipated November 2006 release Bobby, an ensemble piece that intertwines multiple substories in the Ambassador Hotel just prior to RFK's assassination. She also appears in Nick Cassavetes's Alpha Dog (2007), alongside an A-list cast that includes newbie Emile Hirsch and Bruce Willis. The picture dramatizes the true story of a drug dealer in his early twenties who gets in over his head; Stone plays the traumatized mother of the child he kidnaps, a boy who is in hock for a massive drug tab. Universal slated it for release in January 2007. In that same year's drama When a Man Falls in the Forest, directed by Ryan Eslinger, she plays a kleptomaniacal Midwestern housewife. The cast also stars Timothy Hutton, Dylan Baker and Pruitt Taylor Vince. She continued to work steadily in projects such as Streets of Blood, Largo Winch II, and the biopic Lovelace.Wed to MacGyver producer Michael Greenberg from 1984 to 1987, and George Englund, Jr. (Cloris Leachman's son) prior to that, Stone married her third husband, San Francisco Examiner editor Phil Bronstein, in early 1998, with whom she adopted a son. They divorced in early 2004. She runs an LA-based production shingle, Chaos Productions.
Ronny Cox (Actor) .. Vilas Cohaagen
Born: July 23, 1938
Birthplace: Cloudcroft, New Mexico
Trivia: An alumnus of Eastern New Mexico University, American actor Ronny Cox received one the best early film showcases an actor could ask for. In 1972, he was cast as one of the four unfortunate rafters in Deliverance; it was Cox who engaged in the celebrated "dueling banjos" sequence with enigmatic albino boy Hoyt J. Pollard. Two years later, Cox found himself in Apple's Way, a homey TV dramatic weekly described as a "modern Waltons". Most of his subsequent roles were in this benign, All-American vein--and then Cox shocked his followers by portraying Jerry Rubin in the 1975 PBS TV drama The Trial of the Chicago Seven. During this telecast, Cox became one of the first (if not the first) actors to mouth a now-familiar expletive of disgust on American television. As his physique thickened and his hairline thinned in the 1980s, Cox was much in demand in films as a corporate villain, notably in Paul Verhoeven's Robocop (1984) and Total Recall (1990). The flip side of this hard-nosed screen image was his portrayal of the apoplectic but scrupulously honest police chief in Eddie Murphy's Beverly Hills Cop films.
Michael Ironside (Actor) .. Richter
Born: February 12, 1950
Birthplace: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: Canadian actor Michael Ironside has specialized in tough, steel-fisted villainous film roles. Ironside played the ruthless brain-splitting cult leader in Scanners (1981), the unethical cop in Cross Country (1983), and the megalomaniacal cyborg in Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone (1984), among other wicked characterizations. He was also seen as Dick Wetherly in Top Gun, 1986's biggest hit, and as General Katana in Highlander II: The Quickening (1991). He'd go on to appear in films like The Machinist and Terminator Salvation, as well as TV series like ER, SeaQuest DSV: 2032, and Desperate Housewives.
Marshall Bell (Actor) .. George/Kuato
Born: September 28, 1942
Trivia: Bell is a supporting actor, onscreen from the '80s.
Mel Johnson Jr. (Actor)
Michael Champion (Actor) .. Helm
Trivia: Lead actor Champion began appearing on screen in the '80s.
Ray Baker (Actor) .. McClane
Born: July 09, 1948
Birthplace: Omaha, Nebraska
Roy Brocksmith (Actor) .. Dr. Edgemar
Born: September 15, 1945
Died: December 16, 2001
Birthplace: Quincy, Illinois
Rosemary Dunsmore (Actor) .. Dr. Lull
Born: July 13, 1952
Birthplace: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Trivia: Started her acting career performing on stage across Canada.Auditioned for the role of Katherine Brooke in Anne of Green Gables: The Sequel with the monologue she says to Anne the night after the play.In 1990, was named "Canadian who makes a difference" by Maclean's Magazine.Won a Masque Award for her performance in the 2001 Centaur Theatre production of Wit.In 2009, won an ACTRA Award for her work in The Baby Formula (2008).Teaches acting and directing at prestigious schools, including University of Toronto, National Theatre School, Equity Showcase, Canadian Film Centre, Halifax Shortworks, Film Training Manitoba and George Brown College.
David Knell (Actor) .. Ernie
Born: September 08, 1961
Alexia Robinson (Actor) .. Tiffany
Born: January 01, 1960
Dean Norris (Actor) .. Tony
Born: April 08, 1963
Birthplace: South Bend, Indiana, United States
Trivia: Began acting in plays as a child and did theatre at university. Visited New York City while at university to interview for jobs on Wall Street, but also used the time to go on auditions. Attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. Often portrays some type of authority figure. Was cast as a cop in Lethal Weapon 2, a commanding officer in Starship Troopers, and a state trooper in Little Miss Sunshine, amongst others. Has created several videos parodying his cop persona, including a fictional show called Cop Talk and one that pokes fun at his character in the series Breaking Bad.
Mark Carlton (Actor) .. Bartender
Born: January 15, 1945
Debbie Lee Carrington (Actor) .. Thumbelina
Born: December 14, 1959
Lycia Naff (Actor) .. Mary
Born: August 29, 1962
Robert Costanzo (Actor) .. Harry
Born: October 20, 1942
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Actor Robert Costanzo is generally typecast an urban Italian-American, prone to mouthing such lines as "You gotta problem with that?" Costanzo began popping up with regularity in such films as Saturday Night Fever in the late '70s. The first of his many TV-series stints was as plumber Vincent Pizo, the blue-collar father of Travolta clone Joe Piza (Paul Regina), in 1978's Joe and Valerie. He retained his man-of-the-people veneer as maintenance engineer Hank Sabatino in the weekly series Checking In (1980), Lt. V.T. Krantz in the 1990 TVer Glory Days, and the voice of Detective Bullock in Warner Bros.' Batman: The Animated Series (1992). In 1995, Robert Costanzo joined the cast of television's NYPD Blue as Detective Giardella.
Michael LaGuardia (Actor) .. Stevens
Pricilla Allen (Actor)
Ken Strausbaugh (Actor) .. Immigration Officer
Marc Alaimo (Actor) .. Everett
Born: May 05, 1942
Michael Gregory (Actor) .. Rebel Lieutenant
Born: November 26, 1944
Ken Gilden (Actor)
Mickey Jones (Actor) .. Burly Miner
Born: June 10, 1941
Parker Whitman (Actor) .. Martian Husband
Ellen Gollas (Actor) .. Martian Wife
Gloria Dorson (Actor) .. Woman in Phone Booth
Erika Carlson (Actor)
Benny Corral (Actor) .. Punk Cabbie
Bob Tzudiker (Actor) .. Doctor
Erik Cord (Actor) .. Lab Assistant
Frank Kopyc (Actor) .. Technician
Born: August 06, 1948
Paula McClure (Actor) .. Newscaster
Born: January 01, 1962
Died: July 17, 2002
Rebecca Ruth (Actor) .. Reporter
Milt Tarver (Actor) .. Commercial Announcer
Born: December 20, 1943
Roger Cudney (Actor) .. Agent
Monica Steuer (Actor) .. Mutant Mother
Sasha Rionda (Actor) .. Mutant Child
Linda Howell (Actor) .. Tennis Pro
Mel Jr. Johnson (Actor)
Priscilla Allen (Actor) .. Fat Lady
Ken Gildin (Actor) .. Hotel Clerk
Born: February 02, 1955
Robert Picardo (Actor) .. Voice of Johnnycab
Born: October 27, 1953
Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Yale alumnus Robert Picardo made his off-Broadway debut in David Mamet's one-act play Sexual Perversity in Chicago. That was in 1975; two years later, Picardo was first seen on Broadway in Gemini. He launched his TV career in the 1980 miniseries The Dream Merchants, and in 1981 made his first film, The Howling--one of several assignments for director Joe Dante. During his early TV years, he was all too often cast in "first husband" or "wrong boyfriend" supporting roles. Things improved in 1986, when he was hired to play the much-feared high school gym teacher Coach Cutlip in the weekly dramedy The Wonder Years. He went on to co-star as Dr. Dick Richard in the highly acclaimed Vietnam-era series China Beach (1989-91). A busy voiceover artist, Picardo has supplied a variety of vocal characterizations for such series as Dinosaurs and Batman. Undoubtedly you'll be reading even more about Robert Picardo in the future, by virtue of his being cast as the holographic Doc Zimmerman on TV's Star Trek: Voyager(1995- ). In the post Star Trek years, Picardo would find ongoing success on shows like The Lyon's Den, Stargate SG-1, and Stargate Atlantis.
Kamala Lopez (Actor) .. Additional Voices
Born: April 15, 1964
Morgan Lofting (Actor) .. Additional Voices
Karlyn Michelson (Actor) .. Additional Voices
Paul Johansson (Actor)
Born: January 26, 1964
Birthplace: Spokane, Washington, United States
Trivia: At 6'2", with a handsomeness best-termed "rugged," the towering and burly Paul Johansson originally developed his ability in sports -- unsurprising, given his physical stature and the fact that he was the child of hockey demigod Ching Johnson, a key player on the 1954 Stanley Cup champion Detroit Red Wings. Born in Spokane, WA, but raised in the Vancouver area, Johansson landed all-Canadian status as a basketball player for the University of British Columbia, where he was, by his own account, ejected from five games against the University of Saskatchewan for overly aggressive behavior (in 1987). Johansson had his eyes on a stint in the Olympics and full-time work in the NBA (and in fact, the Atlanta Hawks offered him a spot on their team) when he suddenly realized that he no longer cared seriously about a sports career. Seeking fulfillment and actualization elsewhere, Johansson planned (with the help of his UBC English degree) to launch himself as a writer, and traveled to Los Angeles with friend Jason Priestley with that goal in mind. Instead, he soon discovered a love of acting, and a recurring role on the soap Santa Barbara (as Greg Hughes) followed. Johansson appeared on the Ferris Bueller-like series Parker Lewis Can't Lose from 1991-1992 (as an impossibly hip counterman) and as Sally Field's husband in the 1991 Soapdish, prior to his portrayal of Austin Peale in the blockbuster Western series Lonesome Dove (1994-1995) and its follow-up, Lonesome Dove: The Outlaw Years (1995-1996). Alongside on-camera appearances in such projects as Highlander: The Raven (1998), Wishmaster 2: Evil Never Dies (1999), and John Q. (2002), Johansson moved quietly into writing and directing, first with the 1997 short film Conversations in Limbo (based on an Oscar Wilde story), then with the direct-to-video coming-of-age picture The Incredible Mrs. Ritchie, co-starring Gena Rowlands and James Caan. Johansson also starred in the popular teen series drama One Tree Hill, as Dan Scott. He directed and acted in Atlas Shrugged Part 1, a 2011 adaptation of Ayn Rand's 1957 novel of the same name.
Sharon Kane (Actor)
Paul Verhoeven (Actor)
Dave Nicolson (Actor) .. Scientist

Before / After
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The Saint
12:15 pm