Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome


12:30 pm - 2:55 pm, Friday, January 2 on Syfy (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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In the third Mad Max film, the post-nuclear hero encounters a wicked ruler and accepts a duel-to-the-death challenge.

1985 English Stereo
Action Action/adventure Sci-fi Guy Flick Sequel

Cast & Crew
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Mel Gibson (Actor) .. Mad Max
Tina Turner (Actor) .. Aunty Entity
Angelo Rossitto (Actor) .. The Master
Adam Cockburn (Actor) .. Jedediah Jr.
Bruce Spence (Actor) .. Jedediah
Helen Buday (Actor) .. Savannah Nix
Frank Thring (Actor) .. The Collector
Paul Larsson (Actor) .. The Blaster
Angry Anderson (Actor) .. Ironbar
Robert Grubb (Actor) .. Pigkiller
George Spartels (Actor) .. Blackfinger
Edwin Hodgeman (Actor) .. Dr. Dealgood
Bob Hornery (Actor) .. Waterseller
Andrew OH (Actor)
Ollie Hall (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Susan Leonard (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Ray Turnbull (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Lee Rice (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Robert Simper (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Gerard Armstrong (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Max Worrall (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Virginia Wark (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Geeling (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Mark Spain (Actor) .. Mr. Skyfish
Mark Kounnas (Actor) .. Gekko
Rod Zuanic (Actor) .. Scrooloose
Justine Clarke (Actor) .. Anna Goanna
Shane Tickner (Actor) .. Eddie
James Wingrove (Actor) .. Tubba Tintye
Adam Scougall (Actor) .. Finn McCoo
Tom Jennings (Actor) .. Slake
Gerry D'Angelo (Actor) .. Hunter
Travis Latter (Actor) .. Hunter
Miguel Lopez (Actor) .. Hunter
Paul Daniel (Actor) .. Hunter
Emily Stocker (Actor) .. Guardian
Sandie Lillingston (Actor) .. Guardian
Adam Willits (Actor) .. Mr. Scratch
Ben Chesterman (Actor) .. Gatherer
Liam Nikkinen (Actor) .. Gatherer
Christopher Norton (Actor) .. Gatherer
Katharine Cullen (Actor) .. Gatherer
Heilan Robertson (Actor) .. Gatherer
Gabriel Dilworth (Actor) .. Gatherer
Hugh Sands (Actor) .. Gatherer
Rebekah Elmaloglou (Actor) .. Gatherer
Marion Sands (Actor) .. Gatherer
Shari Flood (Actor) .. Gatherer
Kate Tartar (Actor) .. Gatherer
Rachael Graham (Actor) .. Gatherer
Emma Howard (Actor) .. Gatherer
Tarah Williams (Actor) .. Gatherer
Joanna McCarroll (Actor) .. Gatherer
Daniel Willits (Actor) .. Gatherer
Toby Messiter (Actor) .. Gatherer
Tonya Wright (Actor) .. Gatherer
Toni Allaylis (Actor) .. Cusha, the Pregnant Girl
William Manning (Actor) .. Little One

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Mel Gibson (Actor) .. Mad Max
Born: January 03, 1956
Birthplace: Peekskill, New York
Trivia: Despite a thick Australian accent in some of his earlier films, actor Mel Gibson was born in Peeksill, NY, to Irish Catholic parents on January 3rd, 1956. One of eleven children, Gibson didn't set foot in Australia until 1968, and only developed an Aussie accent after his classmates teased him for his American tongue. Mel Gibson's looks have certainly helped him develop a largely female following similar to the equally rugged Harrison Ford, but since his 1976 screen debut in Summer City, Gibson has been recognized as a critical as well as physiological success.Though he had, at one point, set his sights on journalism, Gibson caught the acting bug by the time he had reached college age, and studied at the National Institute of Dramatic Art in Sydney, Australia, despite what he describes as a crippling ordeal with stage fright. Luckily, this was something he overcame relatively quickly -- Gibson was still a student when he filmed Summer City and it didn't take long before he had found work playing supporting roles for the South Australia Theatre Company after his graduation. By 1979, Gibson had already demonstrated a unique versatility. In the drama Tim, a then 22-year-old Gibson played the role of a mildly retarded handy man well enough to win him a Sammy award -- one of the Australian entertainment industry's highest accolades -- while his leather clad portrayal of a post-apocalyptic cop in Mad Max helped the young actor gain popularity with a very different type of audience. Gibson wouldn't become internationally famous, however, until after his performance in Mad Max 2 (1981), one of the few sequels to have proved superior to its predecessor. In 1983, Gibson collaborated with director Peter Weir for the second time (though it was largely overlooked during the success of Mad Max 2, Gibson starred in Weir's powerful WWI drama Gallipoli in 1981) for The Year of Living Dangerously, in which he played a callous reporter responsible for covering a bloody Indonesian coup. Shortly afterwards, Gibson made his Hollywood debut in The Bounty with Oscar-winner Anthony Hopkins, and starred opposite Sissy Spacek in The River during the same year. He would also star in Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985) alongside singer Tina Turner.After the third installment to the Mad Max franchise, Gibson took a two-year break, only to reappear opposite Danny Glover in director Richard Donner's smash hit Lethal Weapon. The role featured Gibson as Martin Riggs, a volatile police officer reeling from the death of his wife, and cemented a spot as one of Hollywood's premier action stars. Rather than letting himself become typecast, however, Gibson would surprise critics and audiences alike when he accepted the title role in Franco Zeffirelli's Hamlet (1990). Though his performance earned mixed reviews, he was applauded for taking on such a famously tragic script.In the early '90s, Gibson founded ICON Productions, and through it made his directorial debut with 1993's The Man Without a Face. The film, which also starred Gibson as a horrifically burned teacher harboring a secret, achieved only middling box-office success, though it was considered a well-wrought effort for a first-time director. Gibson would fare much better in 1994 when he rejoined Richard Donner in the movie adaptation of Maverick; however, it would be another year before Gibson's penchant for acting, directing, and producing was given its due. In 1995, Gibson swept the Oscars with Braveheart, his epic account of 13th century Scottish leader William Wallace's lifelong struggle to forge an independent nation. Later that year, he lent his vocal talents -- surprising many with his ability to carry a tune -- for the part of John Smith in Disney's animated feature Pocahontas. Through the '90s, Gibson's popularity and reputation continued to grow, thanks to such films as Ransom (1996) and Conspiracy Theory (1997). In 1998, Gibson further increased this popularity with the success of two films, Lethal Weapon 4 and Payback. More success followed in 2000 due to the actor's lead role as an animated rooster in Nick Park and Peter Lord's hugely acclaimed Chicken Run, and to his work as the titular hero of Roland Emmerich's blockbuster period epic The Patriot (2000). After taking up arms in the battlefield of a more modern era in the Vietman drama We Were Soldiers in 2002, Gibson would step in front of the cameras once more for Sixth Sense director M. Night Shyamalan's dramatic sci-fi thriller Signs (also 2002). The film starred Gibson as a grieving patriarch whose rural existence was even further disturbed by the discovery of several crop circles on his property.Gibson would return to more familiar territory in Randall Wallace's We Were Soldiers -- a 2002 war drama which found Gibson in the role of Lt. Col. Hal Moore, commander of the First Battalion, Seventh Cavalry -- the same regiment so fatefully led by George Armstrong Custer. In 2003, Gibson starred alongside Robert Downey Jr. and Robin Wright-Penn in a remake of The Singing Detective. The year 2004 saw Gibson return to the director's chair for The Passion of The Christ. Funded by 25 million of Gibson's own dollars, the religious drama generated controversy amid cries of anti-Semitism. Despite the debates surrounding the film -- and the fact that all of the dialogue was spoken in Latin and Aramaic -- it nearly recouped its budget in the first day of release.The actor stepped behind the camera again in 2006 with the Mayan tale Apocalypto and was preparing to product a TV movie about the Holocaust, but by this time, public attention was not pointed at Gibson's career choices. That summer, he was pulled over for drunk driving at which time he made extremely derogatory comments about Jewish people to the arresting officer. When word of Gibson's drunken, bigoted tirade made it to the press, the speculation of the actor's anti-Semitic leanings that had circulated because of the choices he'd made in his depiction of the crucifixion in Passion of the Christ seemed confirmed. Gibson's father being an admitted holocaust denier hadn't helped matters and now it seemed that no PR campaign could help. Gibson publicly apologized, expressed extreme regret for his comments, and checked himself into rehab. Still, the plug was pulled on Gibson's Holocaust project and the filmmaker's reputation was irreparably tarnished.
Tina Turner (Actor) .. Aunty Entity
Born: November 26, 1939
Died: May 24, 2023
Birthplace: Nutbush, Tennessee, United States
Trivia: American entertainer Tina Turner first met her future husband-collaborator Ike Turner in 1959, when he was fronting a popular East St. Louis band called the Kings of Rhythm. From 1960 through 1975, the Ike and Tina Turner Revue toted 25 top-ten Rhythm and Blues hits, the most famous of which was that perennial wedding favorite, "Proud Mary." Turner broke loose from what had become an intolerable and abusive relationship in the mid-1970s, making an impressive solo movie debut as the ear-shattering Acid Queen in 1975's Tommy (five years earlier, she had been featured in the company of Ike in the Rolling Stones' concert documentary Gimme Shelter). As a non-singing film actress, Turner has thus far been confined to a showy villainous turn in 1985's Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. Turner was portrayed (rather along Mother Teresa lines) by Angela Bassett in the 1993 biopic What's Love Got to Do With It?, which was based on Turner's own book (written with Kurt Loder) and which costarred Laurence Fishburne as Ike Turner.
Angelo Rossitto (Actor) .. The Master
Born: January 01, 1908
Trivia: Diminutive American actor Angelo Rossitto was a fixture in American movies for more than 50 years, usually in highly visible supporting and extra roles. Born Angelo Salvatore Rossitto, he entered movies in his teens during the height of the silent era, making his first known appearance in The Beloved Rogue, starring John Barrymore, in 1926. Standing less than four feet tall, with dark hair and a grim visage, and billed at various times as Little Angie, Little Mo, and Little Angelo, Rossitto was a natural for pygmies and circus dwarves, often of a sinister appearing nature; his presence could help "dress" a carnival set or the setting for a fantasy film. He played the dwarf Angeleno in Tod Browning's Freaks at MGM, a pygmy in Cecil B. DeMille's The Sign of the Cross at Paramount, and one of the Three Little Pigs in the Laurel & Hardy-starring vehicle Babes in Toyland. Off camera, he was also a stand-in for Shirley Temple in several of her films. Rossitto didn't become a well-known figure, even among movie cultists, until he went to work for Monogram Pictures during the early '40s, in a series of low-budget horror films and horror film spoofs starring Bela Lugosi, often cast in tandem with the Hungarian-born actor as a kind of double act. His presence added to the bizarre, threatening nature of the films and he became as well known to fans of these low-budget movies as Lugosi, George Zucco, or any of the other credited stars. His role in the first of those Monogram productions with Lugosi, Spooks Run Wild, also starring the East Side Kids, deliberately played off of Lugosi's and Rossitto's sinister seeming images. In between his Poverty Row Monogram productions, the actor fit in small parts at Universal, including Preston Sturges' The Sin of Harold Diddlebock, and he was one of the jesters tormenting the blinded Samson in DeMille's Samson and Delilah. Rossitto, along with his younger contemporaries Jerry Maren, Frank Delfino, and Billy Curtis, was one of Hollywood's busier little people in the years after World War II. Rossitto can be spotted in carnival scenes in Carousel, appeared as the smallest of the "Moon Men" in the low-budget Jungle Jim movie Jungle Moon Men, and played the leader of the aliens in the late-'50s sci-fi satire Invasion of the Saucer Men. Many of Rossitto's appearances were in roles without character names, constituting highly specialized, uncredited (but highly visible) extra work, and he may have been in as many as 200 movies.On television in the late '60s and early '70s, he portrayed a life-sized puppet in the series H.R. Pufnstuf and played a hat in Lidsville. Rossitto was a sideshow huckster in the cheap cult horror movie Dracula Vs. Frankenstein, and as late as the mid-'80s was seen in a small role in Something Wicked This Way Comes and in the featured role of the Master-Blaster in Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome. Although work in 200 movies and television shows sounds like a lot, most of those appearances involved only a single day's or a single week's work, rather than full-time employment. He made his regular living from the 1930s through the 1960s at a newsstand in Hollywood just outside the gate of one of the studios; he joked that when he was needed for a film, they would simply pass the word directly to him on the street and he would report.
Adam Cockburn (Actor) .. Jedediah Jr.
Bruce Spence (Actor) .. Jedediah
Born: January 01, 1945
Trivia: Supporting actor, onscreen from 1970.
Helen Buday (Actor) .. Savannah Nix
Born: January 01, 1963
Trivia: Australian lead actress Helen Buday has appeared onscreen from 1985.
Frank Thring (Actor) .. The Collector
Born: January 01, 1926
Died: December 24, 1994
Trivia: Forceful Australian stage actor Frank Thring averaged about one movie appearance per year after his 1958 debut in A Question of Adultery. Eminently suited for Biblical roles--especially those calling for a touch of weary condescension--Thring was seen as Pontius Pilate in Ben Hur (1959) and as Herod Antipas in The King of Kings. Later on, he brought a tattered dignity to the character of "The Collector" in Mel Gibson's Mad Max movies. Children of the sixties will remember Frank Thring as the hissable sometimes villain in the Australian TV series Skippy, the Bush Kangaroo (1969).
Paul Larsson (Actor) .. The Blaster
Angry Anderson (Actor) .. Ironbar
Born: August 05, 1947
Robert Grubb (Actor) .. Pigkiller
Born: January 31, 1950
Birthplace: Hobart, Tasmania
Trivia: Australian supporting actor Robert Grubb first appeared onscreen in My Brilliant Career (1979).
George Spartels (Actor) .. Blackfinger
Born: April 25, 1954
Edwin Hodgeman (Actor) .. Dr. Dealgood
Born: June 26, 1935
Bob Hornery (Actor) .. Waterseller
Andrew OH (Actor)
Ollie Hall (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Susan Leonard (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Ray Turnbull (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Lee Rice (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Robert Simper (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Brian Ellison (Actor)
Gerard Armstrong (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Max Worrall (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Virginia Wark (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Geeling (Actor) .. Aunty's Guard
Mark Spain (Actor) .. Mr. Skyfish
Mark Kounnas (Actor) .. Gekko
Rod Zuanic (Actor) .. Scrooloose
Born: January 01, 1968
Trivia: Rod Zuanic is an Australian supporting actor who has been onscreen since Fast Talking (1983).
Justine Clarke (Actor) .. Anna Goanna
Shane Tickner (Actor) .. Eddie
James Wingrove (Actor) .. Tubba Tintye
Adam Scougall (Actor) .. Finn McCoo
Tom Jennings (Actor) .. Slake
Gerry D'Angelo (Actor) .. Hunter
Travis Latter (Actor) .. Hunter
Miguel Lopez (Actor) .. Hunter
Paul Daniel (Actor) .. Hunter
Tushka Hose (Actor)
Born: October 13, 1969
Emily Stocker (Actor) .. Guardian
Sandie Lillingston (Actor) .. Guardian
Adam Willits (Actor) .. Mr. Scratch
Born: February 18, 1972
Ben Chesterman (Actor) .. Gatherer
Liam Nikkinen (Actor) .. Gatherer
Dan Chesterman (Actor)
Christopher Norton (Actor) .. Gatherer
Katharine Cullen (Actor) .. Gatherer
Born: June 09, 1975
Heilan Robertson (Actor) .. Gatherer
Gabriel Dilworth (Actor) .. Gatherer
Hugh Sands (Actor) .. Gatherer
Rebekah Elmaloglou (Actor) .. Gatherer
Born: January 23, 1974
Marion Sands (Actor) .. Gatherer
Shari Flood (Actor) .. Gatherer
Kate Tartar (Actor) .. Gatherer
Rachael Graham (Actor) .. Gatherer
Pega Williams (Actor)
Emma Howard (Actor) .. Gatherer
Tarah Williams (Actor) .. Gatherer
Joanna McCarroll (Actor) .. Gatherer
Daniel Willits (Actor) .. Gatherer
Toby Messiter (Actor) .. Gatherer
Tonya Wright (Actor) .. Gatherer
Alison Barrett (Actor)
Toni Allaylis (Actor) .. Cusha, the Pregnant Girl
William Manning (Actor) .. Little One

Before / After
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Aliens
2:55 pm