10,000 A.C.


3:49 pm - 5:45 pm, Today on TNT Latin America (Mexico) ()

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About this Broadcast
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Se explora la Tierra prehistórica de 10.000 aC para examinar los cambios drásticos en el clima y la geología que llevaron a la migración de los humanos; y para estudiar los misterios de ese tiempo, incluyendo su impacto en la Tierra y la evolución y sobrevivencia de los humanos ante una pequeña edad de hielo.

2008 Spanish, Castilian HD Level Unknown Stereo
Acción/aventura Ciencia Drama Fantasía Familia Documental

Cast & Crew
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Marco Khan (Actor)
Mo Zinal (Actor) .. Ka'Ren
Affif Ben Badra (Actor) .. Warlord
Jacob Renton (Actor) .. Young D'Leh
Mona Hammond (Actor) .. Old Mother
Joel Fry (Actor) .. Lu'kibu
Louise Tu'u (Actor) .. Baku's Mother
Junior Oliphant (Actor) .. Tudu
Charles Baloyi (Actor) .. Gatto
Gabriel Malema (Actor) .. Kawu
Hannah Westbury (Actor) .. Cala
Kristian Beazley (Actor) .. D'Leh's Father
Grayson Hunt Urwin (Actor) .. Young Evolet
Farouk Valley-Omar (Actor) .. High Priest
Joe Vaz (Actor) .. Chief of Guards
Tim Barlow (Actor) .. Pyramid God
Antonio Fisher (Actor) .. Young Priest #1
David Denis (Actor) .. Slave Guard #1
Omar Sharif (Actor) .. Narrator

More Information
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Did You Know..
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James Lurie (Actor)
Steven Strait (Actor)
Born: March 23, 1986
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: West Village born and bred, male model Steven Strait worked with some of the best photographers in the business before making his small screen debut in an episode of the popular television drama Third Watch. Strait was educated at Public School Number Three before attending a Catholic High School, and though he would grow up a little faster than many thanks to his urban surroundings, the highly active youngster still found time to cut loose with a bit of basketball and boxing. It was during a workout session at a local gym that Strait was scouted by Boss Models agent John Babin, and though the classically handsome teen had retained a manager since making his stage debut in a Village Community School musical, it was finally time to move on to bigger and better things. Subsequently sent by Babin to A&F Casting directly after signing with Boss, Strait refined his acting abilities at the esteemed Stella Adler School for Acting and soon set his sights on the silver screen. His feature career launched with a supporting role in the 2005 family-oriented comedy Sky High, Strait would subsequently appear in the entertainment industry comedy drama Undiscovered before testing his skills with a substantial role as one of four teens bestowed with supernatural abilities in director Renny Harlin's The Covenant in 2006.
Camilla Belle (Actor)
Born: October 02, 1986
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: A dark-haired beauty with a devilish smile, Camilla Belle began her acting career long before she grew into her bewitching looks. She began appearing in television commercials in 1987, when she was just nine months old. By the time she started school, she was also appearing in her first dramatic role: a part in the made-for-TV thriller, Trouble Shooters: Trapped Beneath the Earth. Born to an American father and Brazilian mother, Belle grew to be fluent in both English and Portuguese, and was in fact named after a character on a popular Brazilian soap opera. While attending school in Los Angeles, Belle enjoyed trips to Brazil to visit family, as well as a household that embraced the food, music, and culture of both branches of her heritage. By the time she was in high school, she'd gotten her feet wet with appearances in numerous TV and big-screen films, such as Empty Cradle and A Little Princess. In 2004, Belle finally landed the part that would make her a popular name with a role in the independent film The Ballad of Jack & Rose. Starring alongside such greats as Daniel Day-Lewis and Catherine Keener was a tremendous experience for the young actress, and she followed up the role with another independent venture, The Chumscrubber. Finally ready for mainstream success, Belle starred in the 2005 remake of When a Stranger Calls, followed by a role in the thriller The Quiet, in which she played an orphaned deaf girl who is placed in the sordid and incestuous household of her godparents and their daughter, played by another sultry teen star, Elisha Cuthbert. She was cast in the prehistoric action film 10,000 B.C., starred in the poignant drama Adrift, the comedy Father of Invention, and the 2011 laugher From Prada to Nada.
Joel Virgel (Actor)
Reece Ritchie (Actor)
Born: July 23, 1986
Marco Khan (Actor)
Mo Zinal (Actor) .. Ka'Ren
Affif Ben Badra (Actor) .. Warlord
Jacob Renton (Actor) .. Young D'Leh
Mona Hammond (Actor) .. Old Mother
Joel Fry (Actor) .. Lu'kibu
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: Made his professional debut in a 2006 episode of The Bill. Was a member of the band Animal Circus in 2012. In 2013, produced and starred in short comedy-thriller film Slap. Is perhaps best known for playing Stylax Rufus Eurysaces in the ITV2 sitcom Plebs between 2013 and 2016. Played Hizdahr zo Loraq on Game of Thrones between 2014 and 2015.
Louise Tu'u (Actor) .. Baku's Mother
Junior Oliphant (Actor) .. Tudu
Charles Baloyi (Actor) .. Gatto
Gabriel Malema (Actor) .. Kawu
Hannah Westbury (Actor) .. Cala
Kristian Beazley (Actor) .. D'Leh's Father
Grayson Hunt Urwin (Actor) .. Young Evolet
Farouk Valley-Omar (Actor) .. High Priest
Joe Vaz (Actor) .. Chief of Guards
Born: July 29, 1972
Birthplace: Johannesburg, South Africa
Trivia: Speaks Afrikaans, English and Portuguese.Studied drama, singing, music and tap at the Performing Arts Workshop.Started his professional acting career doing theater.In the late 90's, was a singer and musician for his band, ten Athlone.Plays guitar, drums, bass guitar and percussion.Owner of Inkless Media, a micro-budget production company.
Tim Barlow (Actor) .. Pyramid God
Born: January 18, 1936
Antonio Fisher (Actor) .. Young Priest #1
David Denis (Actor) .. Slave Guard #1
Omar Sharif (Actor) .. Narrator
Born: April 10, 1932
Died: July 10, 2015
Birthplace: Alexandria, Egypt
Trivia: Over the course of a career that spanned seven decades, Omar Sharif played every ethnic type imaginable: Spanish, Mongolian, Yugoslavian, Turkish, Russian, Jewish, Argentinian, Mexican, and -- most improbably -- a German serving as a Nazi officer (in 1967's Night of the Generals). That was the nature of his smoldering, swarthy good looks: Every race wanted to claim him as their own. The first Arab actor to achieve worldwide fame, Sharif nonetheless could never match the splash he made with two of his earliest English-language features, Lawrence of Arabia and Doctor Zhivago.Omar Sharif was born Michel Demetri Shalhoub on April 10, 1932, to a well-to-do Lebanese Christian family in Alexandria, Egypt. His father was a lumber merchant, while his mother was a socialite whose guests included King Farouk (and who sent her pudgy son to a British-style boarding school so he would lose weight eating the blander food.) He had a natural intelligence for numbers and language, and by the time he graduated from Cairo University with a degree in mathematics and physics, he could speak five languages (including Arabic, English, and French). After graduation, he worked alongside his father in the family lumber business, but his unused talents made him restless for bigger success.Egypt was known as "the Hollywood of the Middle East" in the 1950s, producing more than 100 Arabic-language films a year. Hoping to break into the movies, Shalhoub chose the new moniker "Omar Sharif"; he reasoned Westerners would be familiar with Gen. Omar Bradley, and "Sharif" was similar to "sheriff." In 1954, director Youssef Chahine offered his friend a part in Shaytan Al-Sahra ("Devil of the Desert"), followed by a leading role in Siraa Fil-Wadi ("Struggle to the Valley") opposite Egyptian actress Faten Hamama, a pretty girl-next-door type who had been beloved by Cairo audiences ever since her debut as a child star. A romance soon blossomed between the co-stars; Sharif eventually converted to Islam in order to marry her, and Hamama allowed him to kiss her onscreen, which she had not agreed to do with any other co-star. The duo made seven more movies together, and had a son named Tarek in 1957.Sharif's smoldering yet dignified box-office appeal spread from Egypt to European art-house cinemas, and eventually caught the attention of British director David Lean, who was casting Arabic actors for his biopic of T.E. Lawrence. Sharif's fluency in English put him ahead of the rest of the contenders, and he won the role of Sherif Ali Ibn El Karish in Lawrence of Arabia (1962). Even though the 100-day shoot in the desert -- "without women," the actor later lamented -- tried the entire cast's patience, Sharif enjoyed working under Lean and earned the respect of the notoriously actor-hating director through his dedication. Similarly, Sharif became great friends with Peter O'Toole, declaring that he and his co-star were "like brothers" who, after shooting wrapped, vowed to work together again should any occasion arise.Sharif's role in Lawrence of Arabia made him an international star and won him Golden Globes for Best Supporting Actor and Most Promising Newcomer, as well as an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Doctor Zhivago (1965), his next film for Lean (which included a cameo by his son Tarek as the younger version of his character), cemented his position as a superstar. Doctor Zhivago was an unprecedented smash, making more than 100 million dollars at the box office (over 750 million today, when adjusted for inflation), and earning ten Academy Award nominations and five wins.These two blockbusters made Sharif a star, but he considered it a devil's bargain. Without an agent to act on his behalf, he signed a seven-year contract with Columbia that put his fee at what some sources say was as low as 15,000 dollars per film -- even for hits like Funny Girl (1968). Long sojourns in Europe and the U.S. took him away from Hamama and their son, and a combination of political difficulties reentering Egypt and temptations while away from home weakened their marriage. Acknowledging that Hamama was the love of his life, but paradoxically rationalizing that it would be better to leave her while she was relatively young and could remarry, the pair divorced in 1974.As Sharif's career began a slow downward slide in the mid-'70s, with roles in stinkers like Oh, Heavenly Dog! (1980) and Inchon (1981), his personal life also became cluttered with flings, including one with Italian journalist Paola De Luca that led to a son named Ruben. Rather than concentrate on acting, Sharif instead devoted more and more time to his passion for the card game bridge, writing several books and a syndicated newspaper column about the strategy of the game, as well as lending his name to video-game simulations. He eventually became one of the highest-ranked bridge players in the world, and his love for the game was so great that sometimes he would refuse film roles because the shooting schedule conflicted with bridge tournaments.While Sharif's last decades were mostly devoted to a laissez-faire lifestyle as an intercontinental playboy, living in hotels and frequenting casinos, he did make some onscreen appearances. He played a supporting role in 2004's Hidalgo (in which he demanded -- and received -- rewrites for dialogue he found insulting toward Muslims) and narrated the epic-fantasy film 10,000 B.C. (2008). But his final cinematic triumph was in Monsieur Ibrahim (2003), a heartfelt coming-of-age drama set in 1950s Paris about the unlikely friendship between a kindly Muslim shopkeeper and a Jewish teen. The movie earned praise from critics and won Sharif a Best Actor Award at the Venice Film Festival and a Best Actor César (the French equivalent of the Oscars).His last years were, regrettably, marred by colorful public incidents, including headbutting a policeman in a casino in suburban Paris and punching a parking-lot attendant in Beverly Hills. But this churlish behavior might have been a harbinger of Alzheimer's disease, which blackened his final days. After completing a swan-song cameo in The Secret Scripture with his grandson Omar Sharif Jr., and only six months following the death of Faten Hamama, the woman he still regarded as "the love of my life," Sharif succumbed to a fatal heart attack in Cairo on July 10, 2015.