Stephen King's 'Thinner'


2:30 pm - 4:05 pm, Today on MGM+ Hits HDTV (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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An obese attorney finds himself the unwilling subject of a horrifying weight-loss plan when he is cursed by a vengeful Gypsy.The film is based on the bestselling novel by Stephen King (writing as 'Richard Bachman'). Robert John Burke, Joe Mantegna, Lucinda Jenney, Joy Lenz, Kari Wuhrer, Michael Constantine, Sam Freed.

1996 English Stereo
Horror Fantasy Adaptation Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Joy Lenz (Actor)
Sam Freed (Actor)
Jeff Ware (Actor)
Ed Wheeler (Actor)
Anja Kling (Actor) .. Susanne
Lisa-Marie Koroll (Actor) .. Lara
Oliver Mommsen (Actor) .. Peter
Hannah Schiller (Actor) .. Jasna
Regine Schroeder (Actor) .. Dr. Pauli
Vico Magno (Actor) .. Jonas
Nils Malten (Actor) .. Lehrer Herr Reichert
David Hürten (Actor) .. Sascha
Christian Skibinski (Actor) .. Fahrgast
Eva Verena Müller (Actor) .. Anne Köpf
Paul Michael Stiehler (Actor) .. Moritz Krüger
Bethany Joy Lenz (Actor) .. Linda Halleck
Robert Fitch (Actor) .. Flash Enders
Tom Cumler (Actor) .. Directed Bit
Alexandra Dimopoulos (Actor) .. Gypsy
Josh Lucas (Actor) .. Male Nurse
Christopher C. Murphy (Actor) .. Man Outside in Small Crowd

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Robert John Burke (Actor)
Born: September 12, 1960
Birthplace: Washington Heights, New York, United States
Trivia: Tall, chiseled-face character actor Robert John Burke has been acting since the 1970s, but he is best known to art house audiences as a regular member of New York-based director Hal Hartley's stock company of decidedly non-Hollywood actors. Born on Long Island, Burke studied acting at S.U.N.Y. Purchase in the early '70s. After he graduated from college, Burke began acting in TV, appearing on such shows as As the World Turns and Happy Days. Though he made his feature film debut in The Chosen (1981), Burke devoted his energies in the early '80s to an experimental teaching program designed to involve students directly in the arts. Burke returned to movies and TV in the latter half of the 1980s with roles in actioner Wanted Dead or Alive (1986), TV movie comedy Pass the Ammo (1989), and late-'80s dance trend vehicle Lambada (1989). Burke's fortunes began to change when he was cast in the lead role of an enigmatic ex-con who returns to his Long Island hometown in the then-unknown Hartley's first feature, The Unbelievable Truth (1990). Shot on a shoestring budget in 11 days, The Unbelievable Truth garnered positive notice for Hartley's distinctly offbeat, dark comic sensibility and his stars' deadpan, wry performances. Burke followed The Unbelievable Truth with a supporting part in the Oscar-nominated 1930s coming of age film Rambling Rose (1991) and a high-profile starring role replacing Peter Weller as the imposing eponymous cyborg law enforcer in Robocop 3 (1992). Burke stayed busy from then on, alternating between independent movies and Hollywood projects. Working with Hartley again, Burke starred as one of a pair of brothers searching for their ballplayer-turned-anarchist father in the quirky yet appealing Simple Men (1992); he played a smaller role in Hartley's troubled romance triad Flirt (1995). Burke also acted more than once with the far less celebrated independent filmmaker Eric Schaeffer, appearing in Schaeffer's industry insider comedy My Life's in Turnaround (1993) and self-indulgent romantic comedy If Lucy Fell (1996). Outside of the New York independent scene, Burke played Reese Witherspoon's African gamekeeper father in the children's adventure A Far Off Place (1993), joined the distinguished cast populating Tombstone (1993) (the Kurt Russell version of the Wyatt Earp Western legend), appeared in Oliver Stone's third Vietnam movie, Heaven and Earth (1993), and starred as the cursed obese lawyer in Stephen King's horror yarn Thinner (1996). Continuing to show his versatility in both comedy and drama, Burke joined the supporting cast of the light-hearted buddy chase movie Fled (1996) and starred as Natasha Gregson Wagner's father in the bayou love story First Love, Last Rites (1997). Burke returned to TV in the late '90s in two acclaimed HBO productions, the ambitious miniseries From the Earth to the Moon (1998) and the wrenching Vietnam War docudrama A Bright Shining Lie (1998). At the start of the 2000s, Burke reunited with Hal Hartley for the Cannes Film Festival entry No Such Thing (2001). Drawing upon his varied experience, not to mention his formidable mien, Burke played the mammal/lizard Beast to Sarah Polley's Beauty in Hartley's singular reworking of the fairy tale romance.
Joe Mantegna (Actor)
Born: November 13, 1947
Birthplace: Chicago, Illinois, United States
Trivia: The quiet yet dynamic screen presence of actor Joe Mantegna has made him one of the most powerful supporting actors in Hollywood. Born in Chicago, Mantegna made his acting debut in the 1969 production of Hair. He then joined Chicago's Organic Theatre Company. In 1978, he debuted on Broadway in Working; he also helped write Bleacher Bums, an award-winning play. Still, he did not become well-known until he played a recurring role on the TV show Soap. By 1983 he'd returned to Chicago, where he began working with playwright David Mamet. While playing the lead in Mamet's play Glengarry Glen Ross (1983), Mantegna won a Tony. When Mamet began making films, Mantegna became his actor of choice in works such as House of Games (1987) and Homicide (1991). Prior to that, the actor had played small roles in a number of other films. He also continues to play in a variety of movie genres, working with some of Hollywood's top directors. Mantegna turned producer in 1998 with the crime comedy Jerry and Tom. That trend continued on the small screen as Montenga produced such shows as Midway USA's Gun Stories, Shooting Gallery, and QuickBites, but it was his role as a regular on the CBS series Joan of Arcadia that really kept him in the public eye. Continually returning to his recurring role as Fat Tony on The Simpsons over the next decade, Montegna joined the cast of the hit television series Criminal Minds in 2007, and recieved an Emmy nomination for his performance in the successful mini-series The Starter Wife that same year.
Lucinda Jenney (Actor)
Born: April 23, 1954
Trivia: A stage-trained actress whose brief foray in daytime drama eventually led her into a feature-film career, Lucinda Jenney's star has been on the rise since the early 1980s. Alternating effortlessly between television and film throughout the course of her career, the talented and attractive blonde actress always had a slant toward the dramatic. A Long Island-native whose impressive run in the Broadway production of Gemini (1977-1981) proved the catalyst for her subsequent onscreen career, Jenney's first feature roles came with the made-for-TV efforts First Steps and Out of the Darkness (both 1985). Roles in Peggy Sue Got Married (1986) and Rain Man (1988) were quick to follow, and, in 1989, the actress rounded out her impressive first decade as John Belushi's onscreen wife in the biopic Wired. Though the film was widely panned, it proved Jenney's most substantial role thus far and she escaped relatively unscathed. As the 1990s rolled in, she was nominated for a Best Actress Independent Spirit Award for her performance in 1993's American Heart and a recurring role on the television series High Incident found her gaining something of a following on the small screen. With her performance as one of Demi Moore's sole allies in G.I. Jane (1997), Jenney continued to balance bit roles in such efforts as Leaving Las Vegas (1995) and Thinner (1996) with meatier, more dramatically substantial parts. Supporting roles in high-profile Hollywood releases became increasingly common for Jenney, and following key roles in Thirteen Days (2000) and The Mothman Prophecies (2002), she joined the cast of the acclaimed police drama The Shield. The following year, Jenney appeared in the action thriller S.W.A.T.
Michael Constantine (Actor)
Born: May 22, 1927
Trivia: Though frequently cast in Jewish roles, actor Michael Constantine was actually of Greek extraction. The son of a steel worker, Constantine studied acting with such prominent mentors as Howard DaSilva. The prematurely balding Constantine was playing character roles on and off Broadway in his mid-twenties (he was the Darrow counterpart in the original production of Compulsion), supplementing his income as a night watchman and shooting-gallery barker. In 1959, slightly weary of being ignored by callous Broadway producers and casting directors, Constantine appeared in his first film, The Last Mile (1959), thereby launching a cinematic career that has endured into the mid-1990s. Michael Constantine is perhaps best known for his extensive TV work, notably his four-season (1969-1974) stint as long-suffering high school principal Seymour Kaufman on Room 222 and his starring appearance as night-court magistrate Matthew J. Sirota on the brief 1976 sitcom Sirota's Court.
Kari Wuhrer (Actor)
Born: April 28, 1967
Birthplace: Brookfield, Connecticut, United States
Trivia: The inspiration for over a dozen web shrines, B-movie queen and pop diva Kari Wuhrer has built an expansive list of credits since debuting in the early '80s. Born in Brookfield, CT, to Andrew, a police officer turned salesman, and Karin, a payroll accountant, Wuhrer began her career by singing in local talent contests. As a teenager, she would sneak into Manhattan to play with her punk rock band, Freudian Slip. She also began taking acting classes and persuaded her mother to take her to an audition for Ford Modeling Agency's Talent Division. The company signed her on the spot. She started appearing in commercials, and later juggled her acting roles with drama classes at N.Y.U.'s Tisch School of the Arts and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London. After making her film debut in Fire With Fire (1986), Wuhrer became an MTV veejay and the co-host of network's quiz show Remote Control. She then paid her own way out to Hollywood to make a cameo in the Andrew Dice Clay vehicle The Adventures of Ford Fairlane (1990). Wuhrer eventually settled in Los Angeles, appearing in Beastmaster 2: Through the Portal of Time (1991) and landing a guest spot on Fox's Married With Children. Her own 1993 Fox series, Class of '96, failed to attract viewers, but the network still hired Wuhrer to bed Brian Austin Green in two episodes of Beverly Hills 90210 in 1994. That same year, she began landing more substantial roles, acting opposite Jack Nicholson in Sean Penn's The Crossing Guard and Laurence Fishburne in John Singleton's Higher Learning (1995). Wuhrer played a gypsy in Stephen King's Thinner (1996), before increasing her fan base exponentially when she joined the cast of the sci-fi series Sliders in 1997. While portraying sultry Maggie Beckett on the hit show, she appeared with Jennifer Lopez in Anaconda (1997) and David Schwimmer in Kissing a Fool (1998), as well as headlined numerous B-films, straight-to-video releases, and television movies. In 1999, Wuhrer, who sang and composed songs for several soundtracks, released her first album. Entitled Shiny, it boasted the popular single "There's a Drug." The new millennium saw Wuhrer leaving Sliders and lending her talents (and internet following) to the computer game series Command & Conquer, starring as Agent Tanya in Red Alert 2 and Yuri's Revenge. She made two guest appearances on CBS's CSI and appeared in a string of B-pictures and independent pictures, including Spider's Web (2001), The Rose Technique (2001), The Medicine Show (2001), Berserker (2001), and Malevolent (2002). A veteran of over 40 screen roles, Wuhrer then cashed in on her cult status for Centropolis Entertainment's big-budget homage to low-budget creature flicks, Eight Legged Freaks (2002) -- proving that she had both wit and staying power.
Joy Lenz (Actor)
Born: April 02, 1981
Birthplace: Hollywood, Florida, United States
Trivia: First credited role in a feature film was Linda Halleck in the 1996 Stephen King adaptation Thinner.Founder of Modern Vintage Life.Greatly passionate about musical theatre, she has performed in various productions of The Wizard of Oz, Cinderella, Gypsy and Annie, among others.An accomplished singer and was trained in New York by the director of the Brooklyn College of Opera, Richard Barrett and in L.A. by distinguished teacher Eric Vetro.Started Lark – an online boutique selling clothing with her own original designs –with proceeds benefiting the organizations To Write Love On Her Arms, Love146 and Reading is Fundamental.
Sam Freed (Actor)
Born: August 29, 1948
Time Winters (Actor)
Born: February 03, 1956
Birthplace: Lebanon, Oregon
Howard Erskine (Actor)
Born: June 29, 1926
Jeff Ware (Actor)
Adriana Delphine (Actor)
Daniel Von Bargen (Actor)
Born: June 05, 1950
Birthplace: Cincinnati, Ohio
Walter Bobbie (Actor)
Born: November 18, 1945
Stephen King (Actor)
Born: September 21, 1947
Birthplace: Portland, Maine, United States
Trivia: Stephen King wrote his first short story at seven, and was first published (in a comic fanzine) at 18. After attending the University of Maine, he worked as a sportswriter for his local newspaper and labored away for a while in an industrial laundry. He was teaching high school English at Maine's Hampden Academy when his first novel, Carrie, was published in 1974. Over the next decade he blossomed into the most popular writer in America, as well as one of the most prolific; in addition to the books published under his own name, he also wrote five pseudonymously as Richard Bachman (one of these, The Running Man, was filmed in 1989, with Arnold Schwarzenegger in the lead). No mere hack or dilettante, as has sometimes been alleged, King puts his whole heart and soul in every chiller he writes: His criteria is that if it can scare him, it will scare everyone else. Beginning with 1976's Carrie, virtually all of King's novels have been adapted to the screen -- but only a third or so of the filmizations have been truly worth the effort. For every above-average effort like The Shining (1980), The Dead Zone (1983), and Misery (1990), there has been a failure like Pet Cemetery (1989) and Needful Things (1993). While he claims to have adopted a "take the money and run" philosophy concerning most of his filmed novels, King has, in fact, taken a more active part in movies than most of his contemporaries. He often plays small roles in the films based on his works, and in 1986 he made his directorial bow with Maximum Overdrive. He also directed the first five episodes of the 1991 TV series Stephen King's The Golden Years, and essayed a small role as a bus driver. His other TV contributions have included the miniseries It! (1990), Sometimes They Come Back (1991), The Tommyknockers (1993), The Stand (1994), and The Langoliers (1995). In 1997, King oversaw a television miniseries remake of The Shining to insure that it would be closer to his original vision than the 1980 Kubrick film. Not entirely confined to hair-raisers, Stephen King has also turned out "straight" tales like The Body and Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption, both of which have been filmed as, respectively, Stand by Me (1986) and The Shawshank Redemption (1994). In the years that followed The Shawshank Redemption drew a massive cult following on home video and DVD, and became on of King's most celebrated celluliod adaptations. Of course this would eventually lead to many more film adaptations of King's more dramatic works, and with such efforts as Dolores Caliborne, The Green Mile and Hearts in Atlantis, King adaptations began to take on an air of sophistication (a great irony considering the author himself has deemed his writings to the literary equivilant of a Big Mac and fries) that attracted the likes of such respected dramatic actors as Tom Hanks and Anthony Hopkins. Of course endless sequels to such earlier adaptations as Sometimes They Come Back and Children of the Corn continued to flood the straight-to-video and lend some air of truth to his statements regarding his work, and it seemed that every few years a miniseries based on one of King's novels was almost mandatory. If a belated 1999 sequel to Brian De Palma's 1976 film adaptation of Carrie seemed little more than an attempt to cash in on the current trend towards post-Scream teen horror, a made-for-television remake of the original in 2002 was simply unnecessary. In 2002 The Dead Zone was adapted into a well-recieved television series, and though such feature efforts as 2003's ambitious but laughably flawed Dreamcather proved that filmmakers were willing to take risks with some of the King's more unconventional stories. After adapting Lars Von Trier's acclaimed Danish television chiller The Kingdom into Kingdom Hospital in 2004, fans could look forward to yet another made-for-television adaptation of Salem's Lot and the David Koepp directed Johnny Depp vehicle Secret Window later that same year. Of course as always the line forming to adapt King novels to screen could last be seen winding around the block, and screen versions of Riding the Bullet, The Talisman, Bag of Bones and Desperation wer all in the making as of early 2004. King's writing would continue to spawn several movie and TV projects per year for the next decade, in everything from short films like Survivor Type, to feature films like Grey Matter, to TV series like Heaven.On a personal note, King suffered massive injuries when struck by a minivan while walking outside in June of 1999, a mere month after announcing that he would likely go blind as a result of being stricken with Macular Degeneration. Though King would eventually recover from the injuries he sustained in the minivan incident, there was little doctors could do to halt the devastating effects of his incurable eye condition and an announcement that he would cease writing in 2002 proved a sad blow to legions of loyal fans.
Josh Holland (Actor)
Born: November 06, 1974
John Horton (Actor)
Elizabeth Franz (Actor)
Born: June 18, 1941
Terrence Garmey (Actor)
Randy Jurgensen (Actor)
Born: December 07, 1933
Antonette Schwartzberg (Actor)
Terrence Kava (Actor)
Ruth Miller (Actor)
Irma St. Paule (Actor)
Born: March 23, 1926
Patrick Farrelly (Actor)
Bridget Marks (Actor)
Mitchell Greenberg (Actor)
Born: September 19, 1950
Angela Pietropinto (Actor)
Michael Walker (Actor)
Ed Wheeler (Actor)
Peter Maloney (Actor)
Born: November 23, 1944
Trivia: Small, sad eyed actor, onscreen from the '70s.
Robert Fitch Sr. (Actor)
Born: April 29, 1934
Sean Hewitt (Actor)
Allelon Ruggiero (Actor)
Anja Kling (Actor) .. Susanne
Lisa-Marie Koroll (Actor) .. Lara
Oliver Mommsen (Actor) .. Peter
Born: January 19, 1969
Birthplace: Düsseldorf, Germany
Trivia: Trained in acting at the Schauspielschule Maria Körber in Berlin.Made his television debut playing Jörn in a 1996 episode of Gegen den Wind.Had a brief love affair with his future wife Nicola when they first met and they fell in love 10 years later when they met again.Has been involved with the non-governmental, independent and non-denominational organization SOS Children's Villages since 2005.Is an ambassador for White Ring (Weisser Ring), a non-profit association focused on supporting crime victims and the prevention of crime in several countries across Europe.
Hannah Schiller (Actor) .. Jasna
Regine Schroeder (Actor) .. Dr. Pauli
Vico Magno (Actor) .. Jonas
Nils Malten (Actor) .. Lehrer Herr Reichert
David Hürten (Actor) .. Sascha
Christian Skibinski (Actor) .. Fahrgast
Eva Verena Müller (Actor) .. Anne Köpf
Paul Michael Stiehler (Actor) .. Moritz Krüger
Bethany Joy Lenz (Actor) .. Linda Halleck
Born: April 02, 1981
Birthplace: Hollywood, Florida, United States
Trivia: Received vocal training from the director of the Brooklyn College of Opera. Costarred in Thinner (1996), her feature-film debut, during her sophomore year in high school. Landed the role of Reva's clone on Guiding Light in 1998; was brought back seven months later to play Michelle Bauer. Was nominated with Guiding Light costar Paul Anthony Stewart for a 2000 Soap Opera Digest Award as Favorite Couple. Used Joie Lenz as her stage name until 2003. Her role of Haley on One Tree Hill was rewritten to showcase her singing ability. Formed the musical duo Everly with friend Amber Sweeney in 2008. Opened Galeotti's Restaurant in Washington state in 2009. Supports the international human-rights organization Love146.
Robert Fitch (Actor) .. Flash Enders
Tom Cumler (Actor) .. Directed Bit
Alexandra Dimopoulos (Actor) .. Gypsy
Josh Lucas (Actor) .. Male Nurse
Born: June 20, 1971
Birthplace: Little Rock, Arkansas, United States
Trivia: Parents were peace/anti-nuclear activists who moved frequently while he was young. As a result, he lived in 30 different places before he turned 13. His family did not have a TV until 1984, when they purchased one to watch the Olympics. Realized he wanted to become an actor in 1987 when he was mesmerized by Michael Douglas's Oscar-winning portrayal of Gordon Gekko in Wall Street. Made film debut in 1993's Alive. As an up-and-coming actor, he appeared in a number of off-Broadway shows in New York, including Terrence McNally's controversial drama Corpus Christi in 1998. Made his Broadway debut in 2005 in a revival of Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie. Put on 43lbs. for the part of Texas Western coach Don Haskins in Glory Road (2006). In 2008, he appeared in an off-Broadway production of Fault Lines, a play directed by David Schwimmer. Portrayed a crime boss opposite James Franco in the drama William Vincent, an independent feature that premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2010.
Christopher C. Murphy (Actor) .. Man Outside in Small Crowd

Before / After
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Here After
12:55 pm