Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter


10:00 pm - 11:45 pm, Monday, November 3 on Cinemax Action (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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President Abraham Lincoln moonlights as a vampire hunter after learning that his mother was killed by bloodsuckers in this supernatural action thriller.

2012 English
Fantasy Drama Horror Action/adventure Adaptation Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Benjamin Walker (Actor) .. Abraham Lincoln
Dominic Cooper (Actor) .. Henry Sturges
Anthony Mackie (Actor) .. William Johnson
Mary Elizabeth Winstead (Actor) .. Mary Todd Lincoln
Rufus Sewell (Actor) .. Adam
Marton Csokas (Actor) .. Jack Barts
Alan Tudyk (Actor) .. Stephen A. Douglas
Jimmi Simpson (Actor) .. Josh Speed
Erin Wasson (Actor) .. Vadoma
Joseph Mawle (Actor) .. Thomas Lincoln
Jacqueline Fleming (Actor) .. Harriet Tubman
Jim Lemley (Actor)
Jake LaBotz (Actor) .. Bull Run Private
Dane Rhodes (Actor) .. Captain Slash
John Mcconnell (Actor) .. Scroll Official
Aaron Toney (Actor) .. Will's Brother
Meade Patton (Actor) .. Doctor
Teri Wyble (Actor) .. Henry's Wife
Lawrence Turner (Actor) .. Pharmacist
Earl Maddox (Actor) .. Angry Resident
Bernard Hocke (Actor) .. White House Doctor
Ritchie Montgomery (Actor) .. Guest #1

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Benjamin Walker (Actor) .. Abraham Lincoln
Born: June 21, 1982
Birthplace: Cartersville, Georgia, United States
Trivia: Barred from performing during his first two years at Juilliard, turned to stand-up comedy as a way to stay in front of an audience. Was a featured performer in the Tony-nominated 2007 revival of Inherit the Wind. Performs stand-up comedy regularly. Turned down the role of Beast in X-Men: First Class to appear in Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson on Broadway. Spent six hours in makeup for his role in Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.
Dominic Cooper (Actor) .. Henry Sturges
Born: June 02, 1978
Birthplace: Greenwich, London, England
Trivia: A rough-cut British actor with a dark and slightly brooding presence, Dominic Cooper initially cut his chops on the London and Gotham stages, with two very different roles: adventurer Will Parry in the Royal National Theatre's epic production of Philip Pullman's iconoclastic fantasy His Dark Materials, and that of the womanizer Dakin in the Broadway run of Alan Bennett's The History Boys. Cooper earned favorable notices for each; the success of Boys prompted BBC Two Films and Fox Searchlight to launch a film adaptation in late 2006, also featuring Cooper. Though Boys scarcely represented Cooper's cinematic debut (he appeared in Neil Jordan's Breakfast on Pluto a couple of years prior, among other films), it did prove a watershed, spurring the young actor on to additional film work. In subsequent years, the thespian played Willoughby in John Alexander's U.K. television miniseries Sense and Sensibility (2008), adapted from the novel by Jane Austen; cut against type as an imprisoned white-collar criminal in the Wyatt Brothers' thriller The Escapist (2008); and essayed a supporting role as Sky, Sophie's (Amanda Seyfried) fiancé, in Phyllida Lloyd's big-screen ABBA musical Mamma Mia! (2008).From there, Cooper's career took off. He played future British Prime Minister Charles Grey and Keira Knightley's lover in the costume-drama The Dutchess (2008), followed by a supporting role in the Oscar-nominated An Education (2009), for which he shared a Screen Actor's Guild nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture. Cooper had a busy 2011, first playing Howard Stark (also known as Tony Stark's father) in Captain America: The First Avenger; followed by a commanding performance in the dual roles of Uday Hussein and his look-a-like in The Devil's Double; and finally, a smaller part as famed photographer Milton H. Greene in My Week With Marilyn. He next took a role in Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter (2012), playing Lincoln's mentor in vampire hunting.
Anthony Mackie (Actor) .. William Johnson
Born: September 23, 1979
Birthplace: New Orleans, Louisana, United States
Trivia: A Big Easy-born actor who honed his skills at the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts before completing his education at Juilliard, Anthony Mackie portrayed ill-fated rapper Tupac Shakur in a stage production of Up Against the Wind before taunting Detroit-based rapper Eminem as a member of the rival rhyming crew in the box-office hit 8 Mile. Subsequently appearing onscreen alongside some of the biggest names in the business, Mackie took the lead as a sperm-donating former biotech executive opposite Ellen Barkin and Ossie Davis in Spike Lee's She Hate Me, and proved that he could even hold his own against such screen legends as Clint Eastwood and Morgan Freeman with a substantial role in the boxing drama Million Dollar Baby. While it may be on the silver screen that Mackie has courted the majority of fame, the ascending star also appeared on the Broadway stage in high-profile productions of Ma Rainey's Black Bottom and Drowning Crow.Few actors could dream of a career that advanced as quickly as Mackie's did, and the same year he played leading man in She Hate Me, the then-twenty-five-year-old would earn an Independent Spirit Award nomination for his memorable portrayal of a homeless shelter employee struggling with his cultural and sexual identity in Brother to Brother. Just when it seemed as if Mackie's rigorous work schedule couldn't get any more demanding, the actor would appear in no less than six movies in 2006 including the racially charged kidnapping drama Freedomland, the underground street-ball drama Crossover, and opposite Matthew McConaughey and Matthew Fox in the fact-based football film We Are Marshall.Firmly established, he played a supporting role in the Oscar-winning The Hurt Locker in 2008, and reprised his role of Tupac Shakur in the Notorious B.I.G. biopic, Notorious (2009). Mackie played a former Black Panther in Night Catches Us (2010) and played a supporting role in The Adjustment Bureau (2011). In 2012, he played the historical figure William H. Johnson, Abraham Lincoln's valet, in the fictionalized (obviously) historical action film, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter. Mackie joined the Marvel Cinematic Universe in 2014, playing Sam Wilson/Falcon in Captain America: The Winter Soldier, and reprised the role in later MCU movies.
Mary Elizabeth Winstead (Actor) .. Mary Todd Lincoln
Born: November 28, 1984
Birthplace: Rocky Mount, North Carolina, United States
Trivia: North Carolina native Mary Elizabeth Winstead began training as a ballet dancer as a child, and later studied at Joffrey Ballet School in Chicago. She also studied singing and acting intensively and pursued a successful career on Broadway, appearing in productions like Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Eventually transitioning to the screen, Winstead became an audience favorite when she made a handful of appearances on the soap opera Passions in 1999. She would go on to appear in movies like 2005's Sky High and Final Destination 3, before scoring the role of Lee -- the girl whose friends use her as collateral in order to drive a mint Dodge Charger -- in 2007's Death Proof, part of the double-feature Grindhouse. She played Lucy in Live Free or Die Hard, before taking on the role of Ramona V. Flowers in the quirky 2010 graphic novel adaptation Scott Pilgrim vs. the World.
Rufus Sewell (Actor) .. Adam
Born: October 29, 1967
Birthplace: Twickenham, London, England
Trivia: Sporting the kind of darkly mischievous good looks that often get him cast as randy, ne'er-do-well paramours, Rufus Sewell began his film career in the early '90s and soon emerged as one of England's most promising young actors. The son of an Australian animator who died when he was ten, Sewell was born in Twickenham, Middlesex, on October 29, 1967. He trained to become an actor at London's Central School of Speech and Drama, leaving the school after three years. After making a promising debut on the London stage with an award-winning performance in Making It Better, Sewell originated the role of Septimus Hodge in Tom Stoppard's Arcadia, which earned him a nomination for the prestigious Olivier Award. He also won acclaim on the other side of the Atlantic, winning Broadway's Theatre World Award for his performance in Translations.In addition to his work on the stage, Sewell had been acting on both the large and small screen, making his film debut in 1991 with Twenty-One, in which he played Patsy Kensit's junkie boyfriend. In 1994 he caught the attention of American art house filmgoers with his role as a sweet-natured bus driver who becomes the object of Albert Finney's affections in A Man of No Importance; the same year, PBS viewers could see him star in the acclaimed adaptation of Middlemarch.Sewell's art house recognition increased the following year, when he had starring roles in John Schlesinger's Cold Comfort Farm and Carrington. The first film cast him as an earthy farmer accustomed to rolls in the hay, while the second cast him as one of Emma Thompson's army of spurned lovers. Both films helped to get him noticed, even if the attention centered primarily on his imported lust-object status, but it was not until 1998 that he was given his first starring role, headlining the cast of Dark City. Unfortunately, the film vaporized at the box office, as did Sewell's other film that year, Dangerous Beauty.In 1999, the actor was again visible to transatlantic audiences, first as a bitter, alcoholic cokehead in The Very Thought of You, a romantic comedy released in Britain the previous year; and then in John Turturro's Illuminata, a turn-of-the-century romantic farce which cast him as an amorous actor. The latter film -- which also featured Susan Sarandon, Ben Gazzara, and Christopher Walken in its impressive cast -- won a number of good reviews, as did Sewell, an actor who by this point had made the expression of earthy lustiness into something of an endearing trademark.In 2000 Sewell graced the screen in Bless the Child, a supernatural thriller that also starred Kim Basinger and Christina Ricci. Of course few actors of his generation could essay such instantly dislikable villains as the talented Sewell, and after raising the ire of the noble Heath Ledger in the popular period adventure A Knight's Tale, he would once again make viewer's skin crawl as an aristocratic creep with more than a few skeletons in the closet in Neil Burger's romantic fantasy The Illusionist. In 2008 Sewell appeared as Alexander Hamilton in the Emmy-winning HBO mini-series John Adams, with subsequent roles in Eleventh Hour and The Pillars of the Earth preceding a turn as Detective Aurelio Zen in the TV mini-series Zen, and a turn as an evil bloodsucker with designs on the newly established United States in Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter.
Marton Csokas (Actor) .. Jack Barts
Born: June 30, 1966
Birthplace: Invercargill, New Zealand
Trivia: An actor of remarkable intensity whether playing comedy, drama, or classical-stage roles, Marton Csokas first became familiar to stateside audiences as Borias on the hit television series Xena: Warrior Princess. And though American audiences may not have been privy to his early stage and screen work, his performance in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring made him a familiar face. Born in New Zealand in June 1966, Csokas' early schooling didn't exactly encourage creativity, and the future actor didn't discover his passion for the stage and screen until his late teens. While studying literature and art history for a year at Canterbury and Christchurch, Csokas became involved with a writer's club and theater company before graduating from the New Zealand Drama School and co-founding the The Stronghold Theater. Steadily gaining experience and harboring a growing passion for classical-stage drama, the actor landed a role in the television series Shortland Street before making his feature debut in Jack Brown Genius (1994). Numerous small film roles followed, and, after becoming a recognizable star in his native country, Csokas began to familiarize himself with American television audiences with Xena and such small-screen features as The Three Stooges (2000). His experience in the fantasy world of Xena prepared him well for his role as Celeborn in the first Lord of the Rings movie in 2001, and American audiences later saw the versatile actor as a villainous criminal mastermind bent on world domination in XXX (2002). He appeared in director Alex Proyas' decidedly upbeat Garage Days the same year and in Richard Donner's time travel fantasy Timeline in 2003.
Alan Tudyk (Actor) .. Stephen A. Douglas
Born: March 16, 1971
Birthplace: El Paso, Texas, United States
Trivia: Though he lived in Los Angeles before moving to New York and founding the Court Jesters Improv Troupe, actor Alan Tudyk freely admits that he will always be a Texan at heart. Born in El Paso and raised in Plano, Tudyk was a ham even before he pursued a serious acting career at Julliard from 1993 to 1996. Frequently dressing in cowboy garb on family dinner outings and faking fainting spells in school to get a rise out of teachers, it was easy to see that Tudyk had found his calling early in life. Later, performing at the Dallas Shakespeare Festival and founding the city's Rubber Chicken Standup Improv Troupe, Tudyk moved to the West Coast and bounced to the East Coast before making his feature debut in 1997, with 35 Miles From Normal. It didn't take long before Tudyk found more roles in such popular films as Patch Adams (1998) and The Wonder Boys (2000), though his breakthrough role would come as Sandra Bullock's rehab-mate in 28 Days (also 2000). Tudyk's character was so popular with audiences in test screenings, that director Betty Thomas called him back to shoot a scene giving closure to his character within the film. Larger roles began to pour in, such as his turn in the energetic jousting adventure A Knight's Tale (2001), as well as a lead role in writer-director Joss Whedon's short-lived sci-fi series Firefly and its much-adored theatrical spin-off, Serenity. By the early 2000's, Tudyk had become a favorite, familiar face - and voice, as well, lending his vocal talents to the cast of the animated Ice Age franchise, beginning in 2002. He would earn particular accolades for turns as the drunken Simon in the 2007 British sleeper hit Death at a Funeral, as well as the easily shaken Doc Potter in the gritty western 3:10 to Yuma that same year. Even die-hard fans might not have recognized Tudyk's comic cameo in 2011's Transformers: Dark of the Moon as effete and surprisingly hardcore fighting henchman Dutch. Tudyk would also find a continual home for his talents in the realm of TV, however, with recurring roles on Doll House, Good Vibes, and Suburgatory, as well as voice-acting roles on animated series like Glenn Martin DDS, Young Justice, and Batman: The Brave and the Bold. Never straying far from his cinematic routes, however, Tudyk would gear up for 2012 with the comedic role of historical politician Stephen A. Douglas in the comedy-centric revisionist horror-history film Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.
Jimmi Simpson (Actor) .. Josh Speed
Born: November 21, 1975
Birthplace: Hackettstown, New Jersey, United States
Trivia: New Jersey native Jimmi Simpson honed his skills at Bloomburg University and at the Williamstown Theatre Festival before making his on-screen debut in the 2000 college comedy Loser. With his memorable look and quirky style, Simpson had no trouble finding work, taking on recurring roles on 24, Rose Red, Carnivale, My Name Is Earl, Psych, and It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia. He would also carve out a niche on the big screen, appearing in movies like Zodiac and The Invention of Lying. Simpson would also become a familiar face to many as Lyle the Intern on The Late Show with David Letterman from 2008 to 2009. In 2009, the actor signed on to act alongside Antonio Banderas and Sam Elliott in the thriller The Big Bang.
Erin Wasson (Actor) .. Vadoma
Born: January 20, 1982
Caleb Deschanel (Actor)
Born: September 21, 1941
Trivia: After attending Johns Hopkins University and the University of Southern California film school, American cinematographer Caleb Deschanel was trained at the American Film Institute. He launched his professional career as assistant to veteran photographer Gordon Willis, then he handled the second unit photography for Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now (1978). One of his first major cinematography credits was for the Coppola-produced The Black Stallion (1979), undoubtedly one of the most beautifully-lensed films of the 1970s. Deschanel earned Oscar nominations for his work on The Right Stuff (1983) and The Natural (1984); he was instrumental in developing the Steadicam system that assured rock-steady camera movement under any circumstances, which he would later refine into his own "skycam" system for aerial photography. In 1996, Deschanel earned another Oscar nomination for his work on the acclaimed family film Fly Away Home; he continued to work steadily throughout the decade, giving such films as Anna and the King (1999) their lustrous glow. During the start of the next decade Deschanel provided his for undistinguished fare like Timeline, The Patriot, and National Treasure, but he helped make The Passion of the Christ the most successful independent film and the most successful R rated film in history up to that time. He teamed with John Madden for the Elmore Leonard adaptation Killshot, and brought his typical mastery to Robert Towne's Ask the Dust - beautifully evoking depression era Los Angeles. In addition to his camera credits, Deschanel has directed two films, one of which was the quirky success d'estime The Escape Artist (1982).
Henry Jackman (Actor)
Seth Grahame-Smith (Actor)
Joseph Mawle (Actor) .. Thomas Lincoln
Jacqueline Fleming (Actor) .. Harriet Tubman
Born: September 10, 1977
Jim Lemley (Actor)
Born: March 09, 1965
Jake LaBotz (Actor) .. Bull Run Private
Born: November 23, 1968
Dane Rhodes (Actor) .. Captain Slash
John J. Kelly (Actor)
Born: June 10, 1967
John Mcconnell (Actor) .. Scroll Official
Born: November 13, 1958
Simon Kinberg (Actor)
Born: August 02, 1973
Michele Wolkoff (Actor)
Robin McLeavy (Actor)
Born: June 19, 1981
Birthplace: Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Trivia: Has cited 1971's Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory as one of the first films that inspired her to become an actress. Watched Misery, Carrie and Natural Born Killers to prepare for her role as a sadistic, jilted prom date in the 2009 horror film The Loved Ones. Played Stella in an acclaimed 2009 Sydney Theatre Company production of A Streetcar Named Desire, which featured Cate Blanchett as Blanche and was directed by Liv Ullmann. In 2012, promoted to series regular on Hell on Wheels as Eva, a character based on a real-life 14-year-old settler who was captured by Yavapai tribesmen and eventually sold to Mohaves, from whom she received a face tattoo. Enjoys soul music, especially James Brown, Etta James and Charles Bradley.
John Rothman (Actor)
Born: June 03, 1949
Cameron M. Brown (Actor)
Frank Brennan (Actor)
Lux Haney-Jardine (Actor)
Curtis Harris (Actor)
Bill Martin Williams (Actor)
Born: October 19, 1954
Alex Lombard (Actor)
John Neisler (Actor)
Aaron Toney (Actor) .. Will's Brother
Meade Patton (Actor) .. Doctor
Teri Wyble (Actor) .. Henry's Wife
Lawrence Turner (Actor) .. Pharmacist
Earl Maddox (Actor) .. Angry Resident
Born: September 27, 1957
Bernard Hocke (Actor) .. White House Doctor
Ritchie Montgomery (Actor) .. Guest #1

Before / After
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The Bank Job
11:45 pm