Barbarians Rising: Part 1 Resistance


4:00 pm - 5:00 pm, Today on WJLP Story Television (33.7)

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About this Broadcast
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Part 1 Resistance

Season 1, Episode 1

Series premiere of a docudrama that chronicles the rebel tribes that brought down the Roman Empire. In the opener, Hannibal builds an army to conquer the Alps, and the shepherd Viriathus organizes a resistance to save his people.

2016 English HD Level Unknown Stereo
Documentary Series Premiere War Military History Docudrama

Cast & Crew
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Nicholas Pinnock (Actor) .. Hannibal
Jefferson Hall (Actor) .. Viriathus
Clive Russell (Actor) .. Cumelios
Julian Kostov (Actor) .. Marcus
Ian McElhinney (Actor) .. Tagus
John Macmillan (Actor) .. Mago
Josh Bolt (Actor) .. Reburrus
Nicholas Moss (Actor) .. Vetilius
Mihai Verbintschi (Actor) .. Magalus
Radu Andrei Micu (Actor) .. Ditalicus
Patrick Regis (Actor) .. Hamilcar
Anton Trendafilov (Actor) .. Le père de Viriathus
Wilson Radjou-Pujalte (Actor) .. Hannibal jeune
Atanas Srebrev (Actor) .. Metellus
Alun Raglan (Actor) .. Crixus
Richard Riddell (Actor) .. Flavus
Michael Ealy (Actor) .. Narrator

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Nicholas Pinnock (Actor) .. Hannibal
Born: February 09, 1973
Birthplace: Balham, London, England
Trivia: Spent his early childhood living in Saudi Arabia. Enrolled in Corona Stage Academy at the age of 12; within a week, he made his professional debut in an advert. Joined Lea Anderson's contemporary dance company The Featherstonehaughs after graduating from theatre school. Put together a book of poetry for mental health charity Mind UK. Appeared in his first Hollywood feature film, the 2011 summer blockbuster Captain America; The First Avenger. Played the role of Nelson Mandela in the ITV docudrama: The Prison Years, which was shown on 15 December 2013, the day Mandela was interred. Theatre work has included As You Like It at Stafford Catle during the Staffordshire Shakespeare Festival and Topdog/Underdog at Glasgow's Citizens Theatre.
Jefferson Hall (Actor) .. Viriathus
Clive Russell (Actor) .. Cumelios
Born: December 07, 1945
Birthplace: Reeth, England
Trivia: Scottish-born Clive Russell is six and a half feet of bone and sinew. Add to his imposing stage presence his impressive acting skill and you have a colossal acting machine that can cry, bend steel, and recite Shakespeare. Russell has used his attributes to play Helfdane the Large in The Thirteenth Warrior, Ajax the Great in Troilus and Cressida, and blacksmith Joe Gargery in Great Expectations. For his portrayal of a gigantic but gentle ex-coal miner in the acclaimed Margaret's Museum, Russell earned a Canadian Academy Award nomination for best actor. Russell's appetite for acting is as big as he is. Between 1997 and 2001, he completed 24 films in addition to TV and other projects, including such high-profile productions as The Mists of Avalon (TV miniseries), Oliver Twist (TV miniseries), and Oscar and Lucinda. No, he probably won't replace Sean Connery as Scotland's most famous actor. But he certainly deserves recognition as one of Scotland's best actors -- right up there among Connery, Ewan McGregor, Dougray Scott, and Robert Carlyle.Russell first performed before an audience in 1960 on the Shari Lewis Show. But it was not until 1980 that he got his first real acting job -- performing on the London stage as the superintendent in Nobel Prize-winner Dario Fo's satire The Accidental Death of an Anarchist, about police corruption in Italy. The reviews were good, and he reprised that role for television in 1983. After further honing his skills in various British TV productions and a handful of films -- including Jute City, The Power of One, The Hawk, and Seconds Out -- Russell received exposure before international audiences as Caleb Garth in the celebrated BBC miniseries Middlemarch, based on the George Eliot novel of the same name. A year later, he fell in love on the movie screen with Helena Bonham Carter in Margaret's Museum, earning laudatory reviews worldwide. Clive Russell had arrived. After more TV roles and another film, Russell played Ralph Fiennes' father in another critically acclaimed film, Oscar and Lucinda. Growing recognition of his acting skills then brought him plum roles in four major TV miniseries: Great Expectations, Oliver Twist, The Railway Children, and The Mists of Avalon. In the same year that he made Mists, Russell also performed in The Emperor's New Clothes, starring Ian Holm as Napoleon. In 2002, his career reached new heights when he took on a role in a BBC/Columbia Tristar production about a mountain-rescue team in Scotland.
Julian Kostov (Actor) .. Marcus
Ian McElhinney (Actor) .. Tagus
John Macmillan (Actor) .. Mago
Josh Bolt (Actor) .. Reburrus
Born: May 02, 1994
Nicholas Moss (Actor) .. Vetilius
Mihai Verbintschi (Actor) .. Magalus
Radu Andrei Micu (Actor) .. Ditalicus
Born: July 18, 1982
Patrick Regis (Actor) .. Hamilcar
Anton Trendafilov (Actor) .. Le père de Viriathus
Wilson Radjou-Pujalte (Actor) .. Hannibal jeune
Atanas Srebrev (Actor) .. Metellus
Born: April 19, 1971
Alun Raglan (Actor) .. Crixus
Richard Riddell (Actor) .. Flavus
Born: May 31, 1984
Michael Ealy (Actor) .. Narrator
Born: August 03, 1973
Birthplace: Silver Spring, Maryland, United States
Trivia: A native of Silver Spring, MD, suave and clean-cut actor Michael Ealy appeared on-camera from the late '90s. He began on the small screen, with guest appearances on network programs including Law & Order and ER, but scored his breakout role with a much-favored turn as Ricky Nash, a convict-in-the-running with several past charges against him, in the predominantly African American ensemble comedies Barbershop (2002) and Barbershop 2: Back in Business (2004). The billing in these projects was somewhat prescient: Ealy continued to take challenging and unique supporting roles and gradually worked his way up the Hollywood ladder, openly declaring himself in no hurry to become a top-billed star. Additional projects included the action sagas 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) and S.W.A.T. (2003) and the psychological thriller November (2003), but Ealy netted much greater acclaim -- and flexed some impressive dramatic muscle -- with his portrayal of Teacake in the Oprah Winfrey-produced telemovie Their Eyes Were Watching God (2005). He then landed the incredibly demanding and edgy lead role of Darwyn Al-Sayeed, a terrorist plotting an attack on the United States, in the Showtime original miniseries Sleeper Cell (2005). In 2008, Ealy starred opposite Will Smith and Rosario Dawson in the earnest suicide drama Seven Pounds, directed by Gabriele Muccino (The Pursuit of Happyness). Ealy took on a leading role as a Bishop hiding in a small Italian village that opposes the Nazi cause in Spike Lee's acclaimed war drama Miracle at St. Anna (2008), and co-starred with Julianna Margulies and Michael J. Fox in the CBS television series The Good Wife the following year. In 2010 he played a supporting role in the crime thriller Takers, and starred in the romantic comedy Think Like a Man in 2010.

Before / After
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