Chappie


12:03 am - 02:08 am, Thursday, January 15 on HBO Xtreme (Panamerican English) ()

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About this Broadcast
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The story of a police robot named Chappie, who develops the ability to think and feel for himself. As people fight back against the mechanised police force, sinister forces seek to capture Chappie for their nefarious purposes.

2015 English Stereo
Action/adventure Drama Sci-fi Crime Drama Crime Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Dev Patel (Actor) .. Deon Wilson
Ninja (Actor)
Yolandi Visser (Actor) .. Yo-Landi
Jose Pablo Cantillo (Actor) .. Yankie (Amerika)
Sigourney Weaver (Actor) .. Michelle Bradley
Hugh Jackman (Actor) .. Vincent Moore
Brandon Auret (Actor) .. Hippo
Maurice Carpede (Actor) .. Police Chief
Jason Cope (Actor) .. Tetravaal Lead Mechanic
Kevin Otto (Actor) .. Interviewer
Chris Shields (Actor) .. Journalist
Bill Marchant (Actor) .. Professor
Mark K. Xulu (Actor) .. Gang Member
Sherldon Marema (Actor) .. Gang Member
Shaheed Hajee (Actor) .. Gang Member
David Davadoss (Actor) .. Mercedes Benz Driver
Anneli Muller (Actor) .. BMW Driver
Kendal Watt (Actor) .. Nissan Driver
Eugene Khumbanyiwa (Actor) .. King
Chan Marti (Actor) .. Field Reporter
Vuyelwa Booi (Actor) .. Field Reporter
Mike Blomkamp (Actor) .. Police Officer
Anthony Bishop (Actor) .. Police Officer
Paul Dobson (Actor) .. Police Robots
Max Poolman (Actor) .. Hippo's Thug
Alistair Prodgers (Actor) .. Tetravaal Mechanic
Wandile Molebatsi (Actor) .. Armored Truck Guard
Arran Henn (Actor) .. VSN News Desk Reporter
Thami Ngubeni (Actor) .. VSN News Desk Reporter
James Bitonti (Actor) .. Gun Store Owner
Andea DeJager (Actor) .. Tetravaal Office Assistant
Hein DeVries (Actor) .. Special Forces Soldier
Daniel Hirst (Actor) .. Merc
Paul Hampshire (Actor) .. Merc
Dan Hirst (Actor) .. Merc

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Dev Patel (Actor) .. Deon Wilson
Born: April 23, 1990
Birthplace: Harrow, Middlesex, England
Trivia: British actor Dev Patel began showing signs of his talent as a performer at a young age, earning praise for his work in school plays when he was still in primary school. Born to Indian parents, Patel grew up in the London suburb of Harrow, where he focused on drama in school. At 16, he was studying for the higher education qualifying exams that make up a rigorous portion of British academic life when he scored a role on the hit English teen drama Skins. By the next year, he was cast in the leading role of Jamal Malik in Danny Boyle's landmark film Slumdog Millionaire, playing a kid from the slums of Mumbai who experiences a miraculous series of events despite his desperate surroundings. Patel instantly became a worldwide star, and his performance in the award-winning film was celebrated by audiences and critics alike. Soon, he was parlaying the success into new projects, signing on to play Zuko in The Last Airbender. He followed that up two years later with a turn in the all-star ensemble The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel.
Ninja (Actor)
Yolandi Visser (Actor) .. Yo-Landi
Born: March 03, 1984
Jose Pablo Cantillo (Actor) .. Yankie (Amerika)
Born: March 30, 1979
Birthplace: Marshfield, Wisconsin, United States
Sigourney Weaver (Actor) .. Michelle Bradley
Born: October 08, 1949
Birthplace: New York City, New York, United States
Trivia: Though she is a classically trained dramatic actress and has played a variety of roles, Sigourney Weaver is still best known for her portrayal of the steel-jawed, alien-butt-kicking space crusader Ellen Ripley from the four Alien movies. The formidably beautiful, 5'11'' actress was born Susan Weaver to NBC president Pat Weaver and actress Elizabeth Inglis. Her father had a passion for Roman history and originally wanted to name her Flavia, but after reading F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby at the age of 14, Weaver renamed herself Sigourney, after one of the book's minor characters. After being schooled in her native New York City, Weaver attended Stanford University and then obtained her master's at the Yale School of Drama where, along with classmate Meryl Streep, she appeared in classical Greek plays. After earning her degree, Weaver was only able to find work in experimental plays produced well away from Broadway, as more conventional producers found her too tall to perform in mainstream works. After getting her first real break in the soap opera Somerset (1970-1976), she made her film debut with a bit part in Woody Allen's Annie Hall in 1977. Weaver had her first major role in Madman which was released just prior to Alien in 1979. Though the role of Ripley was originally designed for Veronica Cartwright (who ultimately played the doomed Lambert), scouts for director Ridley Scott saw Weaver working off-Broadway and felt she would be perfect for the part. The actress' take on the character was laced with a subtlety that made her a new kind of female action hero: Intelligent, resourceful, and unconsciously sexy, Weaver's Ripley was a woman with the guts to master her fear in order to take on a terrifying unknown enemy. Alien proved to be one of the year's biggest hits and put Weaver on Hollywood's A-list, though she would not reprise her character for another seven years. In between, she worked to prove her versatility, playing solid dramatic roles in Eyewitness (1981) and The Year of Living Dangerously (1982), while letting a more playful side show as a cellist who channels a fearsome demon in Ghostbusters (1984). In 1986, Aliens burst into the theater, even gorier and more rip-roaring than its predecessor. This time, Weaver focused more on the maternal side of her character, which only served to make her tougher than ever. Her unforgettable performance was honored with a Best Actress Oscar nomination, and was followed up by Weaver's similarly haunting portrayal of doomed naturalist/animal rights activist Diane Fossey in Gorillas in the Mist (1988). The role won Weaver her second Best Actress Oscar nomination, and that same year, she received yet another Oscar nomination -- this time for Best Supporting Actress -- for her deliciously poisonous portrayal of Melanie Griffith's boss in Working Girl. After 1992's Alien 3, Weaver had her next big hit playing President Kevin Kline's lonely wife in the bittersweet romantic comedy Dave (1993). She then gave a gripping performance as a rape/torture victim who faces down the man who may or may not have been her tormentor in Roman Polanski's moody thriller Death and the Maiden (1994). During the latter half of the decade, Weaver appeared in Alien Resurrection -- perhaps the most poorly received installment of the series -- but increasingly surfaced in offbeat roles such as the coolly fragile Janey in Ang Lee's The Ice Storm and the psychotic, wicked Queen in the adult-oriented HBO production The Grimm Brothers' Snow White (both 1997). In 1999, she starred in the sci-fi spoof Galaxy Quest, making fun of her image as a sci-fi goddess while continuing to prove her remarkable versatility.Weaver's first high-profile project of the new millenium saw her swindling Ray Liotta and Gene Hackman as a sexy con-woman teamed up with Jennifer Love Hewitt. Already into her fifties, Weaver proved she still possessed plenty of sex-appeal even alongside a substantially younger starlet like Hewitt. She played up her sultry side some more in the well-received 2002 indie-comedy Tadpole, but changed gears a bit in 2003, playing a villain in the family sleeper hit Holes.In 2004, Weaver could be seen as part of the ensemble cast in M. Night Shyamalan's summer thriller The Village. She played a tough-as-nails network executive in the satire The TV Set, and provided the voice of the ship's computer in WALL-E. In 2008 she appeared in projects as diverse as Baby Mama and Be Kind Rewind. She had a major role in the box-office blockbuster Avatar - teaming up with director James Cameron again. Her very busy 2011 included the role of a government official in the sci-fi comedy Paul, the girlfriend of a sheltered insurance salesman in Cedar Rapids, and a part in Oren Moverman's cop drama Rampart.Weaver has been married to stage director Jim Simpson since 1984. When not appearing in films, she continues to be active in theater.
Hugh Jackman (Actor) .. Vincent Moore
Born: October 12, 1968
Birthplace: Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Trivia: A star in his native Australia thanks to his work on television and in musical theatre, actor Hugh Jackman became known to American audiences through his role as Logan/Wolverine in Bryan Singer's lavish adaptation of the popular Marvel comic X-Men (2000). Born of English parentage in Sydney on October 12, 1968, Jackman was raised as the youngest of five children. After earning a communications degree as a journalism major from Sydney's University of Technology, he attended the Western Australia Academy of Performing Arts, where he studied drama. The fledgling actor got his first big break immediately after graduation, when he was offered a starring role on the popular TV series Corelli; his casting proved to be doubly serendipitous, as it provided him with an introduction to his future wife, actress Deborra-Lee Furness, with whom he would have a son. Jackman starred in a number of other TV series -- and also began to earn recognition for his work on the stage in such productions as Beauty and the Beast, Sunset Boulevard, and Trevor Nunn's acclaimed Royal National Theatre production of Oklahoma!, the latter of which featured the actor in an Olivier-nominated performance as Curly McLain. In 1999, a year after being nominated for the Olivier, Jackman was again honored, this time with a Best Actor nomination from the Australian Film Institute for his portrayal of a man estranged from his brother in the urban drama Erskineville Kings. The actor's winning streak continued when he was hired to replace Dougray Scott as Wolverine in Bryan Singer's high-profile adaptation of X-Men. The film, whose cast also included Ian McKellen, Patrick Stewart, Anna Paquin, James Marsden, and Halle Berry, opened to strong reviews and box-office to become one of the biggest hits of the summer. Jackman's rising international popularity was reflected by his casting in Tony Goldwyn's Someone Like You, a romantic comedy also starring Ashley Judd and Greg Kinnear. Jackman was hard to ignore in 2001, appearing just a few short months later in John Travolta's latest comback, Swordfish.2003 saw the return of the X-Men and, with them, Jackman's Wolverine in X2: X-Men United, a film that not only repeated the first film's financial success, but was considered by many to be the rare sequel that outdoes its predecessor. Sticking with the action genre, Jackman could next be seen in the title role of the 2004 ultra-big-budget film Van Helsing. Although Van Helsing was met with critical disdain, and underperformed at the box office, Jackman rebounded by earning rave reviews as the lead in the Broadway musical The Boy From Oz. That same year he hosted the annual Tony awards, again to great acclaim.Fans had numerous opportunities to see Jackman on the big screen in 2006. He took a humorous turn that summer as a possible serial killer in Woody Allen's comedy Scoop, and in fall he starred opposite Oscar winner Rachel Weisz in the stylish The Fountain as a man who searches through three different time periods concurrently, on a single spiritual journey. That same autumn, Jackman could also be seen in the dark fantasy The Prestige, playing a turn of the century magician who some speculate performs real magic, and before winter, audiences were hearing his vocal work in a pair of animated films, Flushed Away and Happy Feet. 2006 also proved to be the year Jackman announced he would produce and star in a big-screen adaptation of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical Carousel.Jackman would spend the following years appearing in numerous films, like X-Men: First Class, Butter, and Real Steel. He would enjoy one of his biggest successes playing Jean Valjean in Tom Hooper's adaptation of the stage musical Les Miserables, a role that earned Jackman a Best Actor nomination from the Academy, his first Oscar nod.
Brandon Auret (Actor) .. Hippo
Born: December 27, 1972
Birthplace: Johannesburg, South Africa
Trivia: Was inspired to become an actor after watching 1983's Return Of The Jedi.Appeared in a number of stage productions such as Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Debbie Does Dallas, Sleeping Beauty, Buddy – The Buddy Holly Story, and Aladdin, among others.Speaks Afrikaans.Frequently works with District 9 director Neill Blomkamp, also from South Africa.Is co-owner and producer of the broadcast media and film production company A Breed Apart Pictures.
Johnny K. Selema (Actor)
Anderson Cooper (Actor)
Born: June 03, 1967
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Television news mainstay Anderson Cooper graduated from Yale with a degree in political science, then studied briefly at the University of Hanoi. He inaugurated his career in broadcast journalism as the chief international correspondent of Channel One before leaving his post at that network to join ABC News as a regular correspondent on such series as World News Tonight, 20/20, and 20/20 Downtown. In time, Cooper accepted a position as anchor on his own eponymous CNN talk program, Anderson Cooper 360°. Cooper joined the cast of 60 Minutes as an infrequent correspondent in December 2001, and also made occasional contributions to its sister program, 60 Minutes II. In addition to his news-reporting work, Anderson hosted the competitive reality show The Mole for its first two seasons (2001-2002). In 2003 he began hosting his own hour-long CNN program Anderson Cooper 360 that was so popular it eventually expanded to two hours.
Maurice Carpede (Actor) .. Police Chief
Jason Cope (Actor) .. Tetravaal Lead Mechanic
Trivia: Jason Cope got his start in show business on the South African TV series The Pure Monate Show. He later transitioned to feature films in his home nation, appearing in movies like 2008's Spoon, and later in the highly anticipated sci-fi feature District 9.
Kevin Otto (Actor) .. Interviewer
Chris Shields (Actor) .. Journalist
Bill Marchant (Actor) .. Professor
Born: March 17, 1964
Robert Hobbs (Actor)
Mark K. Xulu (Actor) .. Gang Member
Sherldon Marema (Actor) .. Gang Member
Shaheed Hajee (Actor) .. Gang Member
David Davadoss (Actor) .. Mercedes Benz Driver
Anneli Muller (Actor) .. BMW Driver
Kendal Watt (Actor) .. Nissan Driver
Eugene Khumbanyiwa (Actor) .. King
Born: December 26, 1976
Chan Marti (Actor) .. Field Reporter
Vuyelwa Booi (Actor) .. Field Reporter
Mike Blomkamp (Actor) .. Police Officer
Anthony Bishop (Actor) .. Police Officer
Paul Dobson (Actor) .. Police Robots
Max Poolman (Actor) .. Hippo's Thug
Alistair Prodgers (Actor) .. Tetravaal Mechanic
Wandile Molebatsi (Actor) .. Armored Truck Guard
Arran Henn (Actor) .. VSN News Desk Reporter
Thami Ngubeni (Actor) .. VSN News Desk Reporter
James Bitonti (Actor) .. Gun Store Owner
Andea DeJager (Actor) .. Tetravaal Office Assistant
Hein DeVries (Actor) .. Special Forces Soldier
Daniel Hirst (Actor) .. Merc
Born: May 13, 1975
Paul Hampshire (Actor) .. Merc
Dan Hirst (Actor) .. Merc
Neill Blomkamp (Actor)
Born: September 17, 1979
Birthplace: Johannesburg, South Africa
Trivia: South African-born short film director Neill Blomkamp established himself in his field with a hand-held, first-person camera style. He also became highly sought after for his ability to blend computer-generated effects with a film's naturalistic elements, soon becoming a popular director for commercials. He provided his visual effects services for a number of American TV shows, like Smallville and Dark Angel, before combining his skill sets as the director of a feature film, helming the sci-fi epic District 9 in 2009. The film earned strong reviews, and was a box-office hit. In addition, Blomkamp earned a Best Adapted Screenplay nomination from the academy for his work on his debut.

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