Chucky el Muñeco Diabólico


5:30 pm - 7:00 pm, Sunday, October 26 on XETV Canal 5 HDTV BC (6.1)

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About this Broadcast
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Un niño descubre que su nuevo muñeco es controlado por el espíritu de un asesino en serie.

1988 Spanish, Castilian
Terror Fantasía Culto Clásico Ciencia Ficción Otro Suspense

Cast & Crew
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Catherine Hicks (Actor) .. Karen Barclay
Chris Sarandon (Actor) .. Mike Norris
Brad Dourif (Actor) .. Charles Lee Ray
Dinah Manoff (Actor) .. Maggie Peterson
Alex Vincent (Actor) .. Andy Barclay
Tommy Swerdlow (Actor) .. Jack Santos
Jack Colvin (Actor) .. Dr. Ardmore
Edan Gross (Actor) .. Friendly Chucky/Kid in Animated Commercial
Ray Oliver (Actor)
Ted Liss (Actor)
Roslyn Alexander (Actor) .. Lucy
Bob Kane (Actor) .. Male TV Newscaster
Ed Gale (Actor) .. Chucky Stunt Double
Jeff Dlugolecki (Actor) .. Derelict
Kayla Blake (Actor) .. Female TV Newscaster

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Catherine Hicks (Actor) .. Karen Barclay
Born: August 06, 1951
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: American actress Catherine Hicks was educated at St. Mary's Notre Dame and Cornell University; after several seasons of stage work, she launched a lengthy TV career. Hicks was seen regularly on the sitcom The Bad News Bears (1978) and starred in the quasi-fantasy detective series Tucker's Witch (1979); she also portrayed Dr. Faith Coleridge on the ABC daytime drama Ryan's Hope. On two occasions, Catherine has had the uneviable task of recreating roles essayed by well-known actresses in earlier films. She played the Gene Tierney role in Bill Murray's remake of The Razor's Edge (1984), and the Barbara Parkins role in the made-for-TV Jacqueline Susann's Valley of the Dolls (1990). In most films, Hicks has provided strong support to the name-above-the-title stars, notably in Peggy Sue Got Married (1986) Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1984) and Garbo Talks (1984). Leading roles came to Catherine Hicks in several films of the late '80s and early '90s: In She's Out of Control (1989), Catherine is Tony Danza's lady friend, and in Child's Play (1988) she's the unlucky mom of the unluckier kid (Alex Vincent) who owns the malevolent "Chucky" doll.
Chris Sarandon (Actor) .. Mike Norris
Born: July 24, 1942
Birthplace: Beckley, West Virginia, United States
Trivia: Formerly husband to Susan Sarandon, whom he met while attending the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., Chris Sarandon spent nearly a decade performing on-stage before making his first television appearance alongside Gene Wilder and Bob Newhart in Thursday's Game in 1974. While that appearance was well received by its audience, Sarandon wouldn't achieve widespread critical recognition from the film industry until his portrayal of an overwrought transsexual opposite Al Pacino in Dog Day Afternoon (1975). Sarandon's performance earned him two prestigious nominations (New Star of the Year - Male from the Golden Globes and Best Actor from the Academy), and by all indications, Sarandon was headed toward a bright future on the silver screen. Rather than jumping into a full-time movie career, however, Sarandon continued his work in theater (he replaced Raul Julia in the Tony-winning Broadway musical The Two Gentlemen of Verona) and appeared in a series of television roles, some of which (such as A Tale of Two Cities in 1980) mirrored his affinity for the classics, while others -- namely The Day Christ Died, in which he played the title role -- offered an opportunity for the actor to get in touch with his religious side. Oddly enough, Sarandon would also appear in a slew of satanic or otherwise horror-themed films, including The Sentinel (1976), Fright Night (1985), and Child's Play (1988). It was his decidedly less grim role as the insidious Prince Humperdinck in Rob Reiner's The Princess Bride, however, that would bring his name back into the hearts of American audiences, albeit his place therein was reserved for fairy tale bad guys. Despite his success, Sarandon was unable to gain mainstream American recognition for a starring role, though his performance as a Holocaust survivor in Forced March (1990) did not go unnoticed by critics. Not long afterward, select U.S. filmgoers were treated to his portrayal of a man obsessed with his deceased ancestor's rumored ability to raise the dead in Alien scriptwriter Dan O'Bannon's The Resurrected (1991). In 1993, Sarandon earned no small amount of approval for giving voice to Jack Skellington, the bony star of Tim Burton's gleefully sinister The Nightmare Before Christmas. After participating in a vampire documentary, an episode of the cult-favorite Tales From the Crypt Presents Bordello of Blood, and, of all things, the film adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's family classic Little Men, Sarandon landed a recurring role as Dr. Burke on NBC's long-running medical drama ER. He continued to work steadily into the 21st century in a variety of projects including Voices in Wartime, Loggerheads, The Chosen One, the remake of Fright Night, and 2012's Safe.
Brad Dourif (Actor) .. Charles Lee Ray
Born: March 18, 1950
Birthplace: Huntington, West Virginia, United States
Trivia: Brad Dourif is a quirky character actor whose gallery of killers, sociopaths, and other lost souls brought to life any number of contemporary horror and science fiction projects. Born March 18, 1950, in Huntington, WV, he began his professional acting career after graduating from college, honing his skills during a three-year apprenticeship with New York's Circle Repertory under the celebrated drama coach Sanford Meisner. While appearing off-Broadway in a production of When You Comin' Back, Red Rider?, Dourif was spotted by director Milos Forman, who immediately cast him in his 1975 film adaptation of the Ken Kesey novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. Dourif's turn as a suicidal teen asylum inmate was one of the most acclaimed film debuts in memory, earning a Best Supporting Actor Golden Globe as well as an Oscar nomination. However, the performance also typecast him as a talent best suited to idiosyncratic, off-center character roles, a straitjacket he remained unable to break from for the duration of his career. He then did not reappear onscreen for another two years before co-starring in the 1977 West German production Gruppenbild mit Dame. Dourif's next major performance came in the 1978 Irvin Kershner thriller The Eyes of Laura Mars, followed by a superb starring turn as a damaged war veteran in John Huston's Wise Blood. Upon completing a supporting role in the 1980 television film Guyana Tragedy: The Story of Jim Jones, Dourif next surfaced in Michael Cimino's legendary flop Heaven's Gate, the first in a string of big-budget disasters to which the actor was attached including Forman's Ragtime and David Lynch's Dune. A series of low-budget projects followed before Dourif reunited with Lynch for a small role in the director's 1986 masterpiece Blue Velvet. However, no other offers of a similar caliber were immediately forthcoming, and instead he found himself providing the voice of the evil doll Chuckie in the Child's Play series of slasher movies. In the years which followed, Dourif occasionally reappeared in more substantial projects (including the 1988 Alan Parker film Mississippi Burning, the 1990 Ken Loach picture Hidden Agenda, and Hanif Kureishi's 1991 directorial debut London Kills Me), but he remained primarily confined to low-budget genre work; additionally, he often guest starred on television, appearing in series including The X-Files, Millennium, and Star Trek: Voyager. In 2001, Dourif took a break from low-budget fright flicks to appear in a decidedly more enormous production, director Peter Jackson's eagerly anticipated Lord of the Rings trilogy.
Dinah Manoff (Actor) .. Maggie Peterson
Born: January 25, 1958
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Actress Dinah Manoff is the daughter of actress/director Lee Grant and playwright Arnold Manoff. A graduate of California School of the Arts, Dinah made her first acting appearance in a PBS special. She won a Tony award as the neurotic daughter of an irresponsible movie screenwriter in Neil Simon's I Ought to Be in Pictures; she re-created this role in the 1982 film version, acting opposite Walter Matthau and her mother Lee Grant. On television, Manoff played Elaine Lefkowitz on the serial satire Soap (1978-79), securing a niche in TV history as the first sitcom regular to be "murdered" on-camera. Dinah Manoff later co-starred as Carol Weston opposite fellow Soap alumnus Richard Mulligan on the weekly comedy Empty Nest (1988-1993).
Alex Vincent (Actor) .. Andy Barclay
Born: April 29, 1981
Tommy Swerdlow (Actor) .. Jack Santos
Trivia: Delivered the valedictorian speech in his high school graduation.In 1983, moved to Los Angeles on his 21st birthday.Started his career as an actor, then wrote a play and a friend introduced him to Michael Goldberg to direct it.Became writing partner with Michael Goldberg and wrote Utopia Parkway, about his family, which got them an agent.A member of the band Sad Girl.Met his A Thousand Junkies' co-stars, T.J. and Blake, at an AA meeting.Made his directing debut in A Thousand Junkies (2017), which he also starred and co-wrote.
Jack Colvin (Actor) .. Dr. Ardmore
Born: October 13, 1934
Died: December 01, 2005
Edan Gross (Actor) .. Friendly Chucky/Kid in Animated Commercial
Alan Wilder (Actor)
Born: September 24, 1953
Neil Giuntoli (Actor)
Born: December 20, 1959
Juan Ramírez (Actor)
Ray Oliver (Actor)
Aaron Osborne (Actor)
Ted Liss (Actor)
Trivia: Ted Liss was a prominent acting coach at the Ted Liss Studio Acting Workshop. Liss began acting on the radio in childhood. Later he was a regular performer with Orson Welles' Mercury Theater. Liss began his film career in the late '40s.
Roslyn Alexander (Actor) .. Lucy
Bob Kane (Actor) .. Male TV Newscaster
Ed Gale (Actor) .. Chucky Stunt Double
Born: August 23, 1963
Jeff Dlugolecki (Actor) .. Derelict
Kayla Blake (Actor) .. Female TV Newscaster

Before / After
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Fórmula 1
2:30 pm
Chucky 2
7:00 pm