6 Below: Miracle on the Mountain


07:37 am - 09:16 am, Thursday, December 4 on MoviePlex East ()

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About this Broadcast
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A former hockey player struggles to survive in frigid terrain after a snowstorm traps him on the Sierra Nevada mountains. As he tries to endure the harsh elements, he is forced to confront the self-destructive behaviour that led to this predicament.

2017 English Stereo
Action/adventure Drama Profile Adaptation Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Josh Hartnett (Actor) .. Eric LeMarque
Mira Sorvino (Actor) .. Susan LeMarque
Jason Cottle (Actor) .. David LeMarque
Kale Culley (Actor) .. Young Eric LeMarque
Sarah Dumont (Actor) .. Sarah
Austin R. Grant (Actor) .. Corey
Nathan Stevens (Actor) .. Seth
Marty McSorely (Actor) .. Boston Bruins Coach
Sean Pilz (Actor) .. Jake
Vashi Nedomansky (Actor) .. Spivack
Joey Miyashima (Actor) .. Guard
David H. Stevens (Actor) .. Wade
Beth Waugh (Actor) .. Beth
Curt Kelsey (Actor) .. Search and Rescue Pilot
Judi Carpenter (Actor) .. Hoist Operator
Jason Boydston (Actor) .. Rescuer
Craig Hosking (Actor) .. Camera Helicopter Pilot
Amber Townsend (Actor) .. Ski Patrol
Devin Hansen (Actor) .. Skier
Joe Bucaro III (Actor) .. Ski Patrol 2
Marty McSorley (Actor) .. Boston Bruins Coach
Chad Wright (Actor) .. Snowboarder

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Josh Hartnett (Actor) .. Eric LeMarque
Born: July 21, 1978
Birthplace: St. Paul, Minnesota, United States
Trivia: One of the crop of obscenely attractive young stars to pop up during the late 1990s, Josh Hartnett has the kind of strong-jawed, puppy-eyed looks that make him equally suited for both movie stardom and Tommy Hilfiger ads. Hartnett was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on July 21, 1978. Following his high school graduation, he attended New York's SUNY-Purchase, but his time there ended after he was offered a role on the short-lived TV series Cracker. He also did a number of TV commercials and plays, and in 1998 he got his screen break with the plum role of Jamie Lee Curtis' son in Halloween: H20. Although the film received poor reviews, it did moderately well at the box office, and that same year Hartnett's profile further increased when he starred in The Faculty. One of a number of films to exploit the current trend in teen horror movies, it featured Hartnett fighting off alien teachers alongside the likes of fellow up-and-comers Elijah Wood and Shawn Hatosy. Although the film didn't do as well as expected, thanks in part to the fact that the teen horror craze was beginning to lose steam, it in no way interfered with the increasing number of opportunities available to the young actor.Hartnett could subsequently be seen in a number of diverse films; among his projects in 2000 alone, he played an Iago-like character in O, the teen re-telling of Othello; the son of Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton in the comedy-drama Town and Country; and the paramour of the eldest of the ill-fated Lisbon sisters in Sofia Coppola's adaptation of The Virgin Suicides. His pattern of starring in films with steadily-increasing budgets reached its apex in 2001 when Hartnett appeared in director Michael Bay's World War II action drama Pearl Harbor, playing Danny, a young soldier who falls in love with his best friend's main squeeze amid the chaos of the titular conflict. Later that same year Hartnett would fight a whole new war in Ridley Scott's Oscar-winning war drama Black Hawk Down, and shortly after swearing off sex for 40 Days and 40 Nights and hitting the street beat with Harrison Ford in the coolly-received buddy cop comedy Hollywood Homicide, the handsome heartthrob would make public his desire to shift his attentions away from blockbuster territory in order to focus his talents on smaller films of increased quality - even if it did mean a leaner paycheck. Though subsequent rumors of his potential involvement with the long-in-development Superman film would seem to betray this sentiment, lower-profile roles in such independent-minded efforts as Sin City and Mozart and the Whale ultimately served to underscore the maturing actor's sincerity. Of course Hartnett wasn't averse to appearing in the occasional mainstream effort, with roles in Wicker Park and Lucky Number Sleven serving to occupy a curious cinematic middle ground between the indie and blockbuster mindsets.By the time Hartnett took a prominent role in Brian De Palma's 2006 true crime drama The Black Dahlia, it appeared as if the actor's willingness to challenge himself onscreen had finally begun to pay off. A dark look at the Hollywood underbelly based on author James Ellroy's best-selling novel, The Black Dahlia preceded an introspective turn as an emerging sports writer who befriends a former boxing champ many had thought dead in Resurrecting the Champ, and a highly challenging role as legendary jazz trumpeter Chet Baker in director Bruce Beresford's The Prince of Cool. Hartnett plays a former police officer who agrees to investigate the disappearance of the son of a wealthy businessman in I Come With Rain (2008), and joined the cast of the highly stylized fantasy drama Bunraku (2010). The actor played a supporting role in the critically acclaimed independent drama Stuck Between Stations in 2011.In 2014, Hartnett returned to his TV roots in the horror drama series Penny Dreadful.
Mira Sorvino (Actor) .. Susan LeMarque
Born: September 28, 1967
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Since her first leading role, as a convict's loyal girlfriend, in her friend Rob Weiss' debut film Amongst Friends (1993), Mira Sorvino has been on the fast track to stardom, playing a wide variety of multifaceted characters. Her breakthrough role displayed her willingness and ability to take on unusual parts; Sorvino shocked and delighted audiences as a crass New York streetwalker in Woody Allen's Mighty Aphrodite (1995). The stretch paid off, not only did her performance steal the show, it also earned Sorvino an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.Born in Tenafly, NJ, on September 28, 1967, Sorvino is the daughter of character actor Paul Sorvino, best known for roles in films like Martin Scorsese's Goodfellas (1990). Initially, her father attempted to steer Sorvino and her two siblings away from the acting profession. He was particularly adamant that his offspring not do any professional acting during childhood, so Sorvino contented herself with appearing in various school productions. Following her high school graduation, she earned a degree in East Asian Studies from Harvard University; she spent one year of her education as an exchange student in Beijing, China, where she became fluent in Mandarin. Upon graduation, Sorvino still wanted to act and she moved to New York to pursue her career. Between small acting gigs, she waited tables and worked as a production assistant until 1992, when Weiss hired her as a third assistant director on the low-budget, independent Amongst Friends. She proved so adept at her job that he promoted her to associate producer and eventually cast her as his leading lady. She appeared in two short films, Susan Seidelman's The Dutch and the satirical The Second Greatest Story Ever Told (both 1993), in which she played a contemporary Virgin Mary. In 1994, Whit Stillman hired her to play a two-faced party girl in Barcelona, while Robert Redford cast her as Rob Morrow's wife in Quiz Show. After winning her Oscar for her performance in the following year's Mighty Aphrodite, Sorvino started finding steady work in Hollywood. After a turn as Matt Dillon's anorexic girlfriend in Beautiful Girls (1996) and an Emmy nomination for her performance in the made-for-TV Norma Jean and Marilyn (1996), Sorvino went on her first big-budget outing as a scientist trying to save New York from giant cockroaches in Mimic. Unfortunately, the film was rejected by critics and audiences alike. Her other major project that year, the comedy Romy and Michele's High School Reunion, attained a level of cult status thanks to its 1980s soundtrack and over-the-top costumes. The following year, Sorvino made two small, offbeat features -- Paul Auster's Lulu on the Bridge and Wonsuk Chin's Too Tired to Die, which cast her as Death -- and another big-budgeted action thriller, The Replacement Killers. Starring opposite Hong Kong action star Chow Yun-Fat, Sorvino was able to put her past experiences in China and her fluency in Mandarin to use; unfortunately, critics and audiences alike had little use for the film. In 1999, Sorvino decided to try her hand at romantic drama, starring opposite Val Kilmer in At First Sight. The multi-handkerchief weepie was something of a critical and commercial disappointment, although Sorvino did win some positive attention for her performance as the architect who helps restore her blind lover's sight. Later that year, she won more acclaim for her starring role as John Leguizamo's estranged wife in Spike Lee's Summer of Sam, a story revolving around the long, hot summer of 1977, when New York was terrorized by serial killer David "Son of Sam" Berkowitz.Little seen performances in a made for television adaptation of The Great Gatsby and the period comedy The Triumph of Love found Sorvino's star dimming in stateside theaters in 2001, though her supporting performance in Tim Blake Nelson's acclaimed holocaust drama The Grey Zone served as a notable reminder of what the young starlet was truly capable of when given the opportunity. A pair of bombs both domestic and foreign dropped in the year that followed, and after appearing opposite Glitter star Mariah Carey in Wisegirls Sorvino's Semana Santa somehow managed to get even worse reviews that even Carey's afformentioned solo effort. Of course by this point Sorvino had almost mastered the art of balancing the bad with the good, and her portrayal of a conflicted war photographer in Between Strangers at least drew fair reviews. By this point stateside fans were likely left wondering whether Sorvino had forsaken her film career for a behind-the-scenes approach to filmmaking, and although she had indeed stepped into the producer's chair with Griffin Dunne's 2000 comedy drama Famous she returned to the silver screen in a big way with a role in the sweeping civil war drama Gods and Generals. As she prepared for roles in the sci-fi thriller The Final Cut and the large scale adventure Instant Karma, Sorvino appeared to be edging towards something of a comeback on stateside screens. Fans eager to catch a glimpse of the actress were pleasantly surprised when Sorvino turned in a winning guest appearance in the popular sitcom Will and Grace in 2003. later turning up on the popular prime time drama House, Sorvino continued to maintain momentum in her film career with roles in Multiple Sarcasms, Union Square, and her father Paul's 2012 feature directorial debut The Trouble with Cali.
Jason Cottle (Actor) .. David LeMarque
Trivia: Actor Jason Cottle enjoyed a brief run in film as a bit player during the late '90s in A-list features including Mad City, Wag the Dog, The Wedding Singer, and The Other Sister, then took a break for around a decade or so before reemerging as the lead in director Dan Gildark's H.P. Lovecraft adaptation Cthulhu (2008). In that film, Cottle plays a Seattle history professor whose life irrevocably changes when he's drawn back to his long-estranged family on the Oregon coast and into the arms of a sinister, apocalyptic cult populated by his dad and others.
Kale Culley (Actor) .. Young Eric LeMarque
Sarah Dumont (Actor) .. Sarah
Austin R. Grant (Actor) .. Corey
Born: November 18, 1993
Birthplace: Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Trivia: Was bitten by the acting bug after jokingly auditioning for his high school's production of All My Sons by Arthur Miller, and landing the lead role.Made his feature film debut playing Hitler Youth 1 in the 2013 war drama Resistance Movement.Trained in acting for a full year with actor/ director Frank Gerrish.Landed his first professional stage role playing Leo in the Salt Lake Acting Company production of 4000 Miles by Amy Herzog in 2014.Also co-writes and directs shorts with his friend Tim Drake.
Nathan Stevens (Actor) .. Seth
Marty McSorely (Actor) .. Boston Bruins Coach
Sean Pilz (Actor) .. Jake
Vashi Nedomansky (Actor) .. Spivack
Joey Miyashima (Actor) .. Guard
Born: November 18, 1957
Trivia: Joey Miyashima has built up a long and impressive resumé over the course of his career, mostly through small but memorable roles, like Pee-Wee's Japanese pen pal Oki Doki on an episode of Pee-Wee's Playhouse in 1988. In 2006, Miyashima became part of the High School Musical franchise, paying Principal Matsui in the first film, and then reprising the role for the third installment, High School Musical 3: Senior Year.
David H. Stevens (Actor) .. Wade
Beth Waugh (Actor) .. Beth
Curt Kelsey (Actor) .. Search and Rescue Pilot
Judi Carpenter (Actor) .. Hoist Operator
Jason Boydston (Actor) .. Rescuer
Craig Hosking (Actor) .. Camera Helicopter Pilot
Born: March 31, 1958
Amber Townsend (Actor) .. Ski Patrol
Devin Hansen (Actor) .. Skier
Joe Bucaro III (Actor) .. Ski Patrol 2
Born: April 04, 1964
Michael Svitak (Actor)
Nathan Furst (Actor)
Tom Lesinski (Actor)
Madison Turner (Actor)
Louise Linton (Actor)
Michael J. Mailis (Actor)
Steven Mnuchin (Actor)
Bradley Pilz (Actor)
Greg P. Russell (Actor)
Derrick Strickland (Actor)
Simon Swart (Actor)
Tucker Tooley (Actor)
Marty McSorley (Actor) .. Boston Bruins Coach
Born: May 18, 1963
Chad Wright (Actor) .. Snowboarder

Before / After
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