Dunkerque


11:55 pm - 01:43 am, Tuesday, November 25 on TNT Latin America (Mexico) ()

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About this Broadcast
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Película inspirada en la segunda Guerra Mundial enfocada en la evacuación de Dunkerque por parte de las tropas aliadas antes de que las fuerzas nazis se afianzaran.

2017 Spanish, Castilian Stereo
Drama Acción/aventura Guerra Militar Historia

Cast & Crew
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Did You Know..
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Fionn Whitehead (Actor)
Damien Bonnard (Actor)
Aneurin Barnard (Actor)
Born: August 05, 1987
Birthplace: Pen-y-bont ar Ogwr, Bridgend, Mid Glamorgan, Wales
Trivia: Starred in the HTV Wales series Jacob's Ladder aged 11. Attended the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama at the same time as Kimberly Nixon and Tom Cullen. Played the role of Melchior in Spring Awakening in the 2009 West End production. Sang songs by David Bowie and The Who in the 2011 musical Hunky Dory with Minnie Driver. Won the award for Best Actor for his role in Citadel at the 2012 Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival in Korea. Was filming his part of Richard III in the BBC's The White Queen when the late king's bones were found. Played the part of Bobby Willis, Cilla Black's husband, alongside Sheridan Smith in ITV's three-part drama Cilla in 2014. Starred as Prince Boris Drubetskoy in Andrew Davies's television adaptation of Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace in 2016.
Tom Hardy (Actor)
Born: September 15, 1977
Birthplace: Hammersmith, London, England
Trivia: Hailing from South West London, dashing and luscious-lipped young actor Tom Hardy started off his career in war dramas alongside other hunky newcomers. He began his studies at the prestigious Drama Centre, but left early for a part in the award-winning HBO miniseries Band of Brothers. He made his feature film debut in Ridley Scott's Black Hawk Down, with Josh Hartnett. He then appeared with Paul Bettany in The Reckoning, a British film based on the novel Morality Play. In 2002, he remained in the U.K. for the independent film Dot the I, sharing the bill with the handsome Gael García Bernal. He then traveled to North Africa for Simon: An English Legionnarie, a story of the French Foreign Legion. In the same year, he gained some heavy international exposure as Shinzon, a clone of Captain Picard in Star Trek: Nemesis. He returned to England for the 2003 thriller LD 50. He was in the 2004 crime film Layer Cake, but scored prime roles in a number of 2005 films including Minotaur and Elizabeth I: The Virgin Queen. Sofia Coppola cast him in Marie Antoinette in 2006, and two years later he had a crucial role in the international hit Bronson. He scored his biggest American hit to that point in 2010 when he was part of the crew in Christopher Nolan's Inception. He played one of two battling brothers in 2011's Warrior, and had a major part in the Oscar nominated remake of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier Spy. He enjoyed is highest profile role to date playing the bad guy Bane in Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight Rises in the summer of 2012. Hardy had a monster 2015, taking over the title role in the hugely successful Mad Max: Fury Road and scoring his first Oscar nomination for his turn in Alejandro G. Iñárritu's The Revenant.
Tom Glynn-Carney (Actor)
Jack Lowden (Actor)
Born: February 06, 1990
Birthplace: Chelmsford, Essex, England
Trivia: His parents had to move to Essex for IVF treatment; both he and his brother were IVF babies. Enrolled in the Scottish Youth Theatre at the age of 10. While at high school he studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London during the summer holidays. Was Deputy Head Boy at high school. Made his television debut at the age of 18 in an Irn Bru advert. Won an Olivier Award and the Ian Charleson Award for his performance in Ghosts in 2013. Featured as one of The Hot 100 by the UK arts and entertainment magazine The List in November 2016. Won the British Academy Scotland Award for his role in the Scottish Highlands thriller Calibre in 2018. In February 2019, teamed up with Beta Cinema to form his own production company, Reiver Pictures, based in Edinburgh.
Harry Styles (Actor)
Born: February 01, 1994
Birthplace: Redditch, Worcestershire, England
Trivia: At the age of 16, worked part-time at a local bakery called W. Mandeville Bakery in Holmes Chapel, England. Was the lead singer in the band White Eskimo which won a local Battle of the Bands competition. Sang "Isn't She Lovely" by Stevie Wonder for his X Factor audition. After auditioning as a solo artist for The X Factor in 2010, he failed to progress to the Boys category; the judges placed him in a five-piece boy band to qualify in the Groups category, which eventually became One Direction. Left One Direction's management company, Modest Management, in 2016, launched his own record label, Erskine Records, and signed a recording contract with Columbia Records as a solo artist. Made his acting debut in 2017 in the film Dunkirk playing a British soldier, Alex, who took part in the Dunkirk evacuation in WWll. Celebrating the release of his debut album in 2017, played gigs at the Garage in London and the Troubadour in Los Angeles, and donated all proceeds to charities. Supports gender equality and stricter gun control in the USA.
James D'arcy (Actor)
Born: August 24, 1975
Birthplace: Amersham, Buckinghamshire, England
Trivia: Spent his gap year working in the drama department of the Christ Church Grammar School in Perth, Australia. Made his professional television debut in a 1996 episode of Silent Witness. In 2002, was nominated for the Ian Charleston Award for Outstanding Performance in a Classical Role, for his performance in Edward II. Is perhaps best known for playing Edwin Jarvis in the Marvel drama series Agent Carter, a role he briefly reprised in 2019's Avengers: Endgame. In 2016, wrote, directed and produced the short comedy-drama film Chicken/Egg.
Barry Keoghan (Actor)
Born: October 17, 1992
Birthplace: Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Trivia: Trained and educated in film under noted Irish playwright and filmmaker Jim Sheridan.Made his feature film debut in the 2011 Irish crime thriller Between The Canals.In his audition tape for 2017's Dunkirk, he pretended a TV remote was a gun, taking the batteries out and pretending they were bullets.Became a brand ambassador for Dior in June 2017.Trained as an amateur boxer.
Kenneth Branagh (Actor)
Born: December 10, 1960
Birthplace: Belfast, Northern Ireland
Trivia: Perhaps the best-known Shakespeare interpreter of the late 20th century, Kenneth Branagh began his career in a golden haze of critical exultation. First a star pupil at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (one of Britain's most prestigious drama schools), then a promising newcomer on the London stage, then hailed as "the next Olivier" for his 1989 screen adaptation of Henry V, Branagh could, for a long time, do no wrong. Unfortunately, a string of bad luck, catalyzed by his disastrous Mary Shelley's Frankenstein in 1994, began to tarnish the halo that had hovered above the actor/director's head. His lavish, four-hour Hamlet in 1996, however, did much to further his status as a man who knew his Bard, helping to alleviate some of the disappointments that both preceded and came after it.Although his accent suggests otherwise, Branagh originally hails from Northern Ireland, not England. Born in Belfast December 10, 1960, to a working-class family, he was raised in the strife-ridden section of the country until he was nine. Leaving Belfast to escape its troubles, his family relocated to Reading, England, where Branagh spent the remainder of his childhood and adolescence. By turns bookish and athletic -- and assuming an English accent at school while remaining Irish at home -- Branagh became interested in acting at the age of 15, after seeing Derek Jacobi perform Hamlet (the two would later collaborate numerous times both in film and on the stage). Immersing himself in all things theatrical, Branagh was accepted at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (RADA) in London when he was 18.For Branagh, RADA formed the beginning of a brilliant career. The young actor drew repeated acclaim, particularly for his titular performance in a production of Hamlet, and won the school's coveted Bancroft Award for his work. After graduation, he went on to further success on the West End stage, where he starred opposite Rupert Everett in a 1982 production of Another Country. For his portrayal of a conflicted schoolboy, the actor won the Society of West End Theatres' Most Promising Newcomer Award. The following year, he further ascended his adopted country's theatrical ranks, securing a coveted membership in the Royal Shakespeare Company. Branagh continued to enjoy almost consistent critical appreciation during his tenure with the company, garnering particular praise for his lead performance in a production of Henry V. He became increasingly unhappy, however, with the RSC's bureaucratic organization and stuffiness and, in 1987, quit to form the Renaissance Theatre Company with his friend David Parfitt. The idea for the company came to Branagh while he was making the acclaimed Masterpiece Theatre adaptation of Fortunes of War in 1987. That production was one of many he did for television during his time with the RSC, and it was during that period that he met Emma Thompson, whom he married in 1989 and cast in almost all his films until their 1995 divorce.Although Renaissance struggled at first -- its premiere effort, a production of Public Enemy, met with across-the-board disapproval -- it gained a reputation for quality work, and soon counted such vaunted performers as Judi Dench, Richard Briers, and Derek Jacobi among its ranks, many of whom were later cast in Branagh's directorial debut, Henry V. The 1989 film, a sober, mud-saturated affair that served as a stark contrast to Olivier's 1944 version (which was intended to boost England's national pride), brought Branagh international acclaim and recognition. He was soon being hailed by many a publication as "the next Olivier," a title which he repeatedly stated made him uncomfortable. The next Olivier or not, Branagh was nominated for Best Director and Best Actor Oscars for his work, and went on to win other honors, including British Academy and National Board of Review Best Director awards.Riding high on this success, Branagh rather cheekily published his autobiography, Beginning, at the advanced age of 28. Although it was labeled a little premature and more than a little ego-driven, the book further played into his mystique, which was heightened in 1991 with his Hollywood debut. That year, he directed and starred opposite Thompson in Dead Again, a stylish, Hitchcock-inspired romantic thriller. The film was both a critical and commercial success, and the two were soon being labeled "the royal couple of British cinema." Branagh's next effort, the 1992 ensemble comedy Peter's Friends, was of comparatively lackluster character. Starring Branagh, Thompson, co-writer Rita Rudner, and comedians Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie, it received some positive reviews, but was largely regarded as a disappointment. Fortunately for Branagh, he had better luck that year with the Bard, turning out a sun-soaked, giddy adaptation of Much Ado About Nothing, which found favor with audiences and critics alike. That same year, he garnered additional acclaim, directing the short film Swan Song and winning an Best Live Action Short Academy Award nomination for his work.Things began to go badly in 1994 with Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, which Branagh both directed and cast himself as the mad doctor. Winning a dubious honor as one of the year's worst movies, Frankenstein had many doubting the director's hitherto golden touch. An adaptation of Othello the following year, in which Branagh was cast as Iago in Oliver Parker's directorial debut, received a similarly lackluster reception. Branagh's other film that year, In the Bleak Midwinter, went largely unseen, though he bounced back to a degree the following year with his all-star, uncut, 1996 adaptation of Hamlet. Clocking in at four hours and featuring a peroxided Branagh as the Danish prince, Julie Christie as Gertrude, Kate Winslet as Ophelia, Derek Jacobi as Claudius, and such actors as Robin Williams, Charlton Heston, and Jack Lemmon in other roles, it was hardcore Shakespeare for the masses. Although many potential audience members were scared off by the film's length, it won a number of positive reviews, and Branagh garnered a Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar nomination.Unfortunately, Branagh's subsequent efforts met with either disdain or indifference. Falling into the latter category were The Proposition, The Theory of Flight, and Robert Altman's The Gingerbread Man, which cast him as, respectively, a priest, an eccentric inventor, and a philandering Southern lawyer. Woody Allen's Celebrity settled thornily into the former category, with Branagh earning almost unanimous critical scorn for his portrayal of the film's neurotic, Allen-esque protagonist. Many critics noted that he seemed to be trying to out-Allen Allen, with unfortunate results. In 1999, Branagh embraced a dastardly, camp sensibility to play the villain in the big-budget Western fantasy Wild Wild West. He did manage to win some of the only positive comments that critics had for the film. Off the screen, he was still keeping busy with Shakespeare, adapting Love's Labour's Lost into a perplexing, '30s-style musical featuring the likes of Alicia Silverstone, Matthew Lillard, and Nathan Lane. A variety of leading roles in better-received features followed in 2002, however, including Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Rabbit-Proof Fence, and the TV miniseries Shackleton.Branagh continued his highly-respected stage career, even though his movie work contained duds like the remake of Sleuth, though he did find success on the small screen playing a detective in the series Wallander.In 2011 Branagh enjoyed his biggest popular and critics success in quite some time, scoring a worldwide smash as the director of the Marvel Superhero movie Thor, and earned raves for his portrayal of Laurence Olivier in My Week With Marilyn, a part that garnered him Oscar, BAFTA, Golden Globe, and Screen Actors Guild nominations for Best Supporting Actor.
Mark Rylance (Actor)
Born: January 18, 1960
Birthplace: Ashford, Kent, England
Trivia: Better known for his work on the English stage than for his onscreen roles, Mark Rylance made a name for himself on the American art house circuit in 2001 with his performance in Patrice Chéreau's controversial melodrama Intimacy. For his portrayal of Jay, a self-destructive bartender engaged in a torrid affair with a married woman, Rylance was required to strip off both his clothes and his emotional inhibitions. He earned raves for his efforts, as well as ribbing from the press in London, where he was the artistic director of Shakespeare's Globe Theatre.Born in Ashford, Kent, on January 18, 1960, Rylance grew up in Milwaukee, where both of his parents were English teachers. Although he was raised in the U.S., the actor felt a strong sense of British identity and returned to his home country at 18 to study theater in London. Accepted into the prestigious Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts, Rylance was soon making a name for himself in productions of Hamlet, Henry V, and Much Ado About Nothing. Rylance first made a notable impression on audiences on both sides of the Atlantic in 1995 -- the same year he became the Globe's director -- when he portrayed an explorer/scientist who marries into an insidiously dysfunctional family in Philip Haas' Angels and Insects. The film, adapted from a novel by A.S. Byatt, earned critical kudos but limited recognition, and Rylance didn't appear onscreen again until he starred in Intimacy. Picked for his starring role opposite Kerry Fox after Chéreau saw his performance as an alcoholic boxer in the 1991 BBC drama The Grass Arena, Rylance turned in a strong portrayal that tended to be overshadowed by the film's graphic content. Its frank sex scenes, which included full frontal nudity and unsimulated oral sex, caused a sensation among the British press who criticized Rylance, a public figure in the theater world, for his willingness to let it all hang out for the public to see. However, Intimacy went on to win critical raves at film festivals across the globe, and in the process allowed Rylance to be recognized as an actor who added up to more than the mere sum of his parts.Rylance continued to take on-screen roles in between theatre jobs, such as playing Thomas Boleyn, the father of Anne Boleyn, in The Other Boleyn Girl, and in the British drama The Government Inspector. In 2015, he was thrown into the American awards circuit for his work in two projects. First, he played Thomas Cromwell (opposite Damian Lewis' King Henry VIII) in the BBC/PBS miniseries Wolf Hall, earning Rylance an Emmy and Golden Globe nomination. Then, he played captive KGB spy Rudolf Abel in Steven Spielberg's Bridge of Spies, which nabbed Rylance his first Oscar nomination and win, for Best Supporting Actor (Rylance became only the second actor, after Daniel Day-Lewis, to win an acting Oscar for a Spielberg film). He continued his association with Spielberg for his next big-screen role, playing the title character in The BFG.
Lee Armstrong (Actor)
James Bloor (Actor)
Luke Y. Thompson (Actor)
Michel Biel (Actor)
Constantin Balsan (Actor)
Billy Howle (Actor)
Mikey Collins (Actor)
Callum Blake (Actor)
Dean Ridge (Actor)
Bobby Lockwood (Actor)
Born: May 24, 1993
Birthplace: Basildon, Essex, England
Trivia: The middle child of three siblings.Started taking dance lessons at the age of 3.When he was 6, was discovered by his former agent Sandra Singer in a local production of Grease.In 2009, modeled for P&O Cruises and Pacific 7 with his sister.Completed one of his General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) a year early.In 2013, won Best Performer at the British Academy Children's Awards for his role as Rhydian Morris in Wolfblood.In 2016, ran the London Marathon to raise money for Great Ormond Street Hospital.
Will Attenborough (Actor)
Tom Nolan (Actor)
Born: January 15, 1948
Matthew Marsh (Actor)
Born: July 08, 1954
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: Has worked in film, theater, radio and television since 1977.Often plays British, South African, German, American and Russian roles.Has appeared in the series Casualty playing 3 different characters Brian Carroll, Russell Miller and Geoff Marks.Played Alexander Haig, the United States Secretary of State, in the 2011 film The Iron Lady.His frequent theater work includes plays like Privates on Parade, Hamlet, Stags & Hens, Comedians, The Day You'll Love Me, Marya, All My Sons, The Lodger, The LIttle Foxes, and more.
Cillian Murphy (Actor)
Born: May 25, 1976
Birthplace: Douglas, Ireland
Trivia: A soft-spoken, fair-skinned actor with startling blue eyes, a penchant for playing volatile characters, and a reluctance to forsake his critically lauded stage career for a life in film, American audiences may best know Irish actor Cillian Murphy as the bike courier making his way through infected London in director Danny Boyle's apocalyptic thriller 28 Days Later. Though the film may have been Murphy's first to find wide stateside exposure, he has been appearing onscreen in the U.K. and his native Ireland since 1997. Born in Douglas, Cork, Ireland, in 1974, Murphy's father was a school inspector and his mother a French teacher. Attending school at Presentation Brothers College Cork while intending to enter into a career in law, Murphy was an avid rugby player who was turned on to the Concordia Theater's unique stage productions in his fourth year. Murphy soon signed up for a workshop with Concordia's Pat Tiernan and it quickly became apparent that he had a natural flair for the stage. Soon cast as the wildly emotional Pig in Concordia's production of Disco Pigs, Murphy debuted to rave reviews and was soon skipping school to go on tour with the production. Though his acting had initially begun as a hobby and a way to kill time on the weekends, it was quickly taking over his life and a career in law seemed less and less appealing. Though he would attempt to continue his law studies, it was soon obvious to Murphy that his heart just wasn't in it.Subsequently cast in a series of interesting and complex roles, Murphy made his feature debut in the 1998 film Sweety Barrett and quickly followed with the coming-of-age comedy drama Sunburn. Though it was obvious that his stage talents translated well to the silver screen, Murphy still maintained that the rush of theater couldn't be touched by celluloid. The problem in Ireland of suicide and poor mental health among young men prompted Murphy to accept a role in the 2000 drama On the Edge, and his role of a suicidal psychiatric patient proved memorable and affecting. Following How Harry Became a Tree (2001), it was time to adapt Disco Pigs into a feature film, and with director Kirsten Sheridan at the helm, Murphy reprised his role of Pig to enthusiastic results. By the time 28 Days Later rolled around, it seemed that everyone except United States audiences were familiar with the rising star, and with the stateside release of the film in mid 2003, all that was soon to change. Noting that, in his opinion, the best actors alternate frequently between stage and screen, Murphy strived to keep a balance as his growing popularity found his film career taking precedence. Following 2003's Zonad, Murphy began preparation for such features as Intermission and Girl With a Pearl Earring (both 2003).Murphy's resumé amassed higher and higher profile roles. 2005 brought his most popular film to date as he played the villain opposite hero Christian Bale in Batman Begins. Murphy's "boy next door" face seemed to make his performance as the menacing Scarecrow all the more disturbing, and he would go on to play the bad guy again later that same year in Red Eye, though this time he wore makeup to cover his boyish features. Soon he was donning even more makeup, however, as a transsexual in the indie hit Breakfast on Pluto. Playing both a victim and a hero in the U.K. of the 1970s, Murphy's ethereal performance as a boy who leaves his Ireland home to live as a woman in London was praised by critics, and the film was a cult success. He followed it up with another passion project in 2006: Ken Loach's award-winning The Wind That Shakes the Barley, a look at the Irish Republicans of the early 20th century and the anti-British rebellion that would continue to tear families apart for decades to come. He next signed on to star with Lucy Liu in the romantic comedy Watching the Detectives, another independent venture that would find Murphy playing a shy film geek who's pulled out of his movie collection and into the real world when he meets a real-life femme fetal, played by Liu. Also on Murphy's calendar for 2007 was the Danny Boyle psychological sci-fi thriller Sunshine, about a small crew of astronauts sent to reignite Earth's dying sun. Over the next few years, Murphy would apper in a number of other films, like Inception, Retreat, and Broken.
Adam Long (Actor)
Born: April 25, 1991
Miranda Nolan (Actor)
Bradley Hall (Actor)
Born: May 08, 1991
Jack Cutmore-Scott (Actor)
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: Performed in 14 stage productions while studying at Harvard University. Received two prestigious awards from Harvard during his time there: the Lee Patrick Award for Drama in 2009 and the Louis Sudler Prize in the Arts in 2010. Was inducted into Harvard's Signet Society, which recognizes students who excel in the arts. In April 2010, made his professional stage debut in the lead role of Boston Publick Theater's production of Entertaining Mr. Sloane. Played Septimus in the American Conservatory Theater's stage production of Arcadia in 2013. In 2014, played the role of Claudio in the Shakespeare in the Park production of Much Ado About Nothing.
Brett Lorenzini (Actor)
Michael Fox (Actor)
Brian Vernel (Actor)
Elliott Tittensor (Actor)
Born: November 03, 1989
Kevin Guthrie (Actor)
Harry Richardson (Actor)
Jochum Ten Haaf (Actor)
Johnny Gibbon (Actor)
Richard Sanderson (Actor)
Kim Hartman (Actor)
Born: January 11, 1952
Birthplace: London, England
Calam Lynch (Actor)
Charley Palmer Rothwell (Actor)
Tom Gill (Actor)
Born: July 26, 1916
Died: July 22, 1971
John Nolan (Actor)
Born: May 22, 1938
Bill Milner (Actor)
Born: March 04, 1995
Birthplace: England
Trivia: English performer Bill Milner took his first screen bow as a child star when the producers of the offbeat comedy Son of Rambow (2007) cast the then-unknown as their lead actor. In the film, Milner played Will Proudfoot, a young man who unexpectedly befriends the school bully and then teams up with him to make a low-budget movie paying homage to Stallone's John Rambo.
Jack Riddiford (Actor)
Harry Collett (Actor)
Eric Richard (Actor)
Born: June 27, 1940
James D'arcy (Actor) .. Pulkownik Winnant
Michael Ray Fox (Actor) .. Engineer
Paul Riley Fox (Actor) .. British Soldier
Johnny Otto (Actor) .. Captain Marshall