USS Indianapolis: Men of Courage


1:02 pm - 3:37 pm, Monday, May 25 on WXTV MovieSphere Gold (41.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Riveting historical drama about the sinking of the USS Indianapolis by Japanese forces in WWII, and the travails endured by the few survivors both while adrift in the Philippine Sea and during the eventual court-martial of Captain Charles B. McVay III.

2016 English Stereo
Action/adventure Drama War

Cast & Crew
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Nicolas Cage (Actor) .. Captain McVay
Tom Sizemore (Actor) .. McWhorter
Thomas Jane (Actor) .. Lt. Adrian Marks
James Remar (Actor) .. Admiral Parnell
Matt Lanter (Actor) .. Bama
Callard Harris (Actor) .. Lt. Standish
Johnny Wactor (Actor) .. Connor
Adam Scott Miller (Actor) .. D'Antonio
Steven Varnes (Actor) .. Slim
Joey Capone (Actor) .. Alvin
Justin Nesbitt (Actor) .. Lindy
Matthew Pearson (Actor) .. Deuce
Shamar Sanders (Actor) .. Quinn
Craig Tate (Actor) .. Garrison
Max Ryan (Actor)
Jacob McManus (Actor) .. Billingsley
Jaime Channing (Actor) .. Private Channing
Edward Delmore lll (Actor) .. Operator #1
Jerod Daniel Perez (Actor) .. Listening Sailor
Stan Houston (Actor) .. Man #1
Brian Keith Matney (Actor) .. Man #2
Kirk Jordan (Actor) .. Man #3
Charles Wiedman (Actor) .. Man #4
Patrick O'Driscoll (Actor) .. Man #5
Ladson Deyne (Actor) .. Submarine Commander
Joshua Dease (Actor) .. Reporter #1
Michael Brannon (Actor) .. Reporter #2
Marley Van Peebles (Actor) .. Sailor #2
Pete Riehm (Actor) .. Admiral Neyland
Jason Rice (Actor) .. Peleliu Officer
Rebecca Pena (Actor) .. Cigarette Girl
Charity Sills (Actor) .. Lady Of The Night
Sasha Feldman (Actor) .. Hollis
Shane Cavanaugh (Actor) .. Crewman #1
Judd Lormand (Actor) .. Lt. Carroll

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Nicolas Cage (Actor) .. Captain McVay
Born: January 07, 1964
Birthplace: Long Beach, California
Trivia: Actor Nicolas Cage has always strived to make a name for himself based on his work, rather than on his lineage. As the nephew of filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola, Cage altered his last name to avoid accusations of nepotism. (He chose "Cage" both out of admiration for avant-garde musician John Cage and en homage to comic book hero Luke Cage). Even if he had retained the family name, it isn't likely that anyone would consider Cage holding fast to his uncle's coattails. Time and again, Cage travels to great lengths to add verisimilitude to his roles.Born January 7, 1964, in Long Beach, CA, to a literature professor father and dancer/choreographer mother, Cage first caught the acting bug while a student at Beverly Hills High School. After graduation, he debuted on film with a small part in Amy Heckerling's 1982 classic Fast Times at Ridgemont High. Following a lead role in Martha Coolidge's cult comedy Valley Girl (1983), Cage spent the remainder of the decade playing endearingly bizarre and disreputable men, most notably as Crazy Charlie the Appliance King in Peggy Sue Got Married (1986), Hi McDonough in Raising Arizona (1987), and Ronny Cammareri in the same year's Moonstruck, the last of which won him a Golden Globe nomination and a legion of female fans, ecstatic over the actor's unconventional romantic appeal.The '90s saw Cage assume a series of diverse roles, ranging from a violent ex-con in David Lynch's Wild at Heart (1990) to a sweet-natured private eye in the romantic comedy Honeymoon in Vegas (1992) to a dying alcoholic in Mike Figgis' astonishing Leaving Las Vegas (1995). For this last role, Cage won a Best Actor Oscar for his quietly devastating portrayal, and, respectability in hand, gained an official entrance into Hollywood's higher ranks. After winning his Oscar, along with a score of other honors for his performance, Cage switched gears in a way that would prove to be, with the occasional exception, largely permanent. He dove into a series of action movies like the Michael Bay thriller The Rock, the prisoners-on-a-plane movie Con Air, and the infamous John Woo flick Face/Off. Greeted with hefty paychecks and audience approval, Cage forged ahead on a career path lit largely with explosions.There would be exceptions, like 1998's City of Angels, a remake of Wim Wenders' Wings of Desire, and Martin Scorsese's Bringing Out the Dead, and the the lightly dramatic romantic comedy The Family Man, but Cage stuck mostly to thrillers and action movies. A spate of such films would fill his resume, like Gone in 60 Seconds, The Life of David Gale, 8MM, and Snake Eyes, but Cage would briefly revisit his roots in character work, teaming with Being John Malkovich director Spike Jonze in 2002 for a duel role in the complex comedy Adaptation (2002). With Cage appearing as both screenwriter Charlie Kaufman as well as his fictional brother Donald, Adaptation followed Charlie's attempt to adapt author Susan Orlean's seemingly unfilmable novel The Orchid Thief as a feature film, and Donald's parallel efforts to write his own hacky yet lucrative script by following the guidance of a caustic, Syd Field-like screenwriting instructor (Brian Cox). A weighty role that demanded an actor capable of portraying characters that couldn't differ more emotionally despite their outward appearance, Adaptation brought Cage his second Oscar nomination -- and he was soon back to business as usual.2004 saw the release of the megahit adventure film National Treasure, which cast Cage as an archaeologist convinced there's a treasure map on the back of the U.S. Declaration of Independence. The outrageous film would earn a sequel in 2007, but first Cage made the ill-advised decision to star in Neil LaBute's reworking of the Robin Hardy/Anthony Shaffer collaboration The Wicker Man (2006). Though video compilations of the movie's most hilariously hackneyed moments would become popular on the internet, Cage was soon portraying a motorcycle-driving stuntman who sells his soul to Mephistopheles -- in Mark Steven Johnson's live-action comic book adaptation Ghost Rider. Upon premiering in the States, the film became a big success. In the same year's sci-fi thriller Next, directed by Lee Tamahori, Cage plays Cris Johnson, a man who attains the ability to see into the future and must suddenly decide between saving himself and saving the world; the film failed to ignite the way Ghost Rider did just a couple months before it. Next came Bangkok Dangerous, Knowing, The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call - New Orleans, Drive Angry, Seeking Justice, and Trespass -- all high octane, high adrenaline movies that found Cage diving, leaping, and shooting his way through the story. Cage found himself with a surprise hit in Matthew Vaughn's Kick-Ass (2010), playing a vigilante former cop in the black comedy film. He voiced the main character in 2013's animated The Croods, but then mostly stuck to action-crime-thriller-type movies for the next couple of years, including films like Left Behind (2014), The Runner (2015) and The Trust (2016).
Tom Sizemore (Actor) .. McWhorter
Born: November 29, 1961
Died: March 03, 2023
Birthplace: Detroit, Michigan, United States
Trivia: A burly, commanding actor known almost as much for the tumultuous quality of his offscreen life as that of his onscreen roles, Tom Sizemore has carved out a niche for himself in such guys 'n' guns films as Natural Born Killers, Strange Days, Heat, and Saving Private Ryan.Born in Detroit, Sizemore was educated at Wayne State and Temple University, earning a Master's in theater at the latter. He enjoyed an auspicious debut year in 1989 when he appeared in no less than four movies including Oliver Stone's Born on the Fourth of July. That same year, the actor won the semi-regular role of Vinnie Ventressa on the popular TV drama China Beach. He went on to do starring work in such films as Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994), Carl Franklin's highly praised crime noir Devil in a Blue Dress (1994) and Michael Mann's crime thriller Heat. Sizemore's involvement with the latter film marked a personal turning point for him; for years he suffered from a well-publicized addiction to heroin, and he seemed to be losing his battle until he met his Heat co-star and childhood icon Robert De Niro, who, Sizemore subsequently admitted in interviews, convinced him to go into rehab.In 1998, Sizemore starred in what was possibly his most high-profile role to date in Steven Spielberg's WWII epic Saving Private Ryan. Cast as Sgt. Horvath, Tom Hanks' right hand man, the actor earned positive notices as part of a stellar ensemble cast that also included Giovanni Ribisi, Matt Damon, Jeremy Davies, and Vin Diesel. He subsequently porked out to play mob boss John Gotti in the made-for-TV Witness to the Mob and then returned to the screen in Martin Scorsese's Bringing Out the Dead (1999), which cast him as Nicolas Cage's ex-best friend. In 2000, Sizemore starred alongside Val Kilmer and Carrie-Anne Moss in the sci-fi adventure Red Planet; that same year, he appeared in Play It to the Bone, a boxing drama starring Woody Harrelson and Antonio Banderas. With the release of Pearl Harbor and Black Hawk Down the following year, the grizzled screen veteran seemed as if he may be threatening to becoming something of a later-day action star.Though to this point Sizemore's work in features had left him with little experience in the realm of television, all of that would change when he took the lead in the 2002 series Robbery Homicide Division. For an actor who excelled at playing hardened detectives and rough cops, the show seemed the ideal star vehicle for Sizemore, and after contributing vocal work for the controversial video game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City that same year, he stepped into the lead for the crime thriller Swindle as the year wound to a close. A supporting role in Dreamcatcher got 2003 off to a shaky start, and things only went downhill from there when, in October of that year, the troubled actor entered rehab before being sentenced to six months in prison on domestic violence charges. Though his personal life may have been somewhat in flux, one certainly couldn't tell by looking at his screen credits for 2004 -- a year in which Sizemore would appear in no less than four films including the family adventure Fly Boys.
Thomas Jane (Actor) .. Lt. Adrian Marks
Born: February 22, 1969
Birthplace: Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Trivia: An actor with handsome, everyman good looks and undeniable screen presence, Thomas Jane has turned up in everything from low-budget indies to sprawling, big-budget Hollywood action spectacles. Born January 29th, 1969, the Baltimore native's unusual entry into show business found him cast in a Romeo and Juliet-inspired Bollywood musical while still in high school. At just 17 years old, Jane was spotted by a pair of Indian producers looking to cast a young, fair-haired American to act as Romeo to a young Indian actress' Juliet. Alas, the lure of Bollywood weighed heavier than the prospect of another year in high school, so Jane soon dropped out to film Padamati Sandhya Ragam in Madras, India. When filming wrapped, he quickly returned stateside despite some tempting offers in India, and a year later, the struggling actor was making the move to Los Angeles. Finding work in L.A. didn't prove easy, but thanks to persistence and hard work, Jane eventually made his way into the local theater scene. A small role in the gay-themed drama I'll Love You Forever...Tonight was followed by a small part in the 1992 film Buffy the Vampire Slayer.Two short years later, Jane stepped into the lead for the quirky crime comedy At Ground Zero, and a role in the ill-fated Crow sequel The Crow: City of Angels followed in 1996. The next year, Jane was cast in the major starring role of real-life beatnik Neal Cassady for the independent film The Last Time I Committed Suicide with Keanu Reeves. By late 1997, Jane's star was steadily rising thanks to supporting parts in Face/Off and Boogie Nights. In 1998, he went indie once again with a role as a former heroin dealer looking to go straight in Thursday and then took a small part in the all-star ensemble cast of the war drama The Thin Red Line.With his role as a shark wrangler in the open-water thriller Deep Blue Sea in 1999, Jane graduated to full-on Hollywood action hero. After returning to Paul Thomas Anderson's fold for Magnolia later that year, he portrayed baseball legend Mickey Mantle in the acclaimed, made-for-HBO feature 61* (2001). His role as a quick-tempered detective working alongside Morgan Freeman's character in Under Suspicion (2000) found Jane at the top of his game, and though performances in The Sweetest Thing (2002) and Dreamcatcher (2003) went largely unseen due to poor box-office performances, audiences could rest assured that they would see plenty of the newly buff actor when he donned the famous skull T-shirt and loaded up to rid the streets of crime in the eagerly anticipated comic book adaptation The Punisher (2004). Two years later Jane would continue his onscreen love-affair with firearms as a Federal Witness Protection program particpant whose cover is dangerously blown in the Elemore Leonard adaptation Killshot. While Jane's performance as an infamous gangster was solid in the action thriller Give 'Em Hell Malone, he wouldn't find true success with mainstream audiences until he took on the leading role in HBO's Hung (2009-2012), a dark comedy following a history teacher (Jane) who moonlights as a prostitute.
James Remar (Actor) .. Admiral Parnell
Born: December 31, 1953
Birthplace: Boston, MA
Trivia: Hard-working character actor James Remar has been mainly typecast as a psychopathic killer in a wide variety of thrillers, both blockbusters and low-budget straight-to-video. A native of Boston, he studied acting at New York's Neighborhood Playhouse and made his Broadway debut with Bent, opposite Richard Gere. His first major film role was gangster Ajax in Walter Hill's 1979 action drama The Warriors. The film gained a minor cult following and seemed to cement Remar's reputation as a bad guy. He would continue to work with director Hill for Windwalker (1980), 48 Hrs. (1982), and Wild Bill (1995).During the '80s, he played psycho gangster Dutch Schultz in Francis Ford Coppola's The Cotton Club, a maniac killer in Rent-a-Cop, and a Neanderthal in The Clan of the Cave Bear. He got a little break in 1989 as the cop Gentry in Gus Van Sant's Drugstore Cowboy. During the '90s, he made a deal with the devil in Tales From the Darkside: The Movie and appeared in many movies that ended up on TV or home video. He had played so many villains that he was able to spoof himself as Max Shady in the comedic thriller parody Fatal Instinct. A few gentle comedy dramas followed with Penny Marshall's Renaissance Man and Herbert Ross' Boys on the Side.Many film roles opened up in the late '90s, from Victor Salva's independent comedy Rites of Passage to the big-budget Robert Zemeckis mystery What Lies Beneath. After playing Frank Cisco on the TV series Total Security, he showed up on HBO's Sex and the City as Richard, Samatha's (Kim Cattrall) rich boyfriend of the moment. He then joined the cast of the USA original series The Huntress as fugitive Tiny Bellows, the love interest of Dottie Thorson (Annette O'Toole). In 2003, he could be seen in feature films from the action moneymaker 2 Fast 2 Furious to the light comedy Duplex.
Matt Lanter (Actor) .. Bama
Born: April 01, 1983
Birthplace: Massillon, Ohio, United States
Trivia: Native Ohioan Matt Lanter began his career as a thespian on the small screen, with guest roles on series programs including Grey's Anatomy, Monk, and Big Love, and multi-episode runs on Heroes and Commander in Chief. He stepped into features as the lead in two non-theatrical sequels: the ABC Family telemovie The Cutting Edge 3: Chasing the Dream and the direct-to-video thriller WarGames: The Dead Code (both 2008). Lanter then appeared on the big screen, in a lead opposite Carmen Electra and Vanessa Minnillo, in the Aaron Seltzer and Jason Friedberg-directed gag-fest Disaster Movie. He would also find success on the small screen, appearing on a reboot of 90210, and providing voices on animated series like Ultimate Spider-Man and Star Wars: The Clone Wars.
Brian Presley (Actor)
Born: August 18, 1977
Trivia: Actor and occasional producer Brian Presley took his premier on-camera bow as a soap opera star, maintaining a particularly high profile on the daytime drama Port Charles. Presley then segued into production work as a triple threat, by writing, producing, and starring in the 2004 sleeper Guarding Eddy, made under his production banner, Freedom Films. This inspirational drama concerns Eddy (Presley), a mentally challenged young man with the unfulfilled dream of playing basketball, who finds comfort and solace from a most unlikely source. The film received limited release in the United States and swept through the festival circuit; Presley followed it up with a return to acting, essaying roles in several key films, including a lead in the slasher opus Borderland, a true crime saga about a series of gruesome murders that transpired near the U.S./Mexico border in 1989.
Callard Harris (Actor) .. Lt. Standish
Yutaka Takeuchi (Actor)
Johnny Wactor (Actor) .. Connor
Adam Scott Miller (Actor) .. D'Antonio
Cody Walker (Actor)
Steven Varnes (Actor) .. Slim
Joey Capone (Actor) .. Alvin
Justin Nesbitt (Actor) .. Lindy
Matthew Pearson (Actor) .. Deuce
Shamar Sanders (Actor) .. Quinn
Craig Tate (Actor) .. Garrison
Mandela Van Peebles (Actor)
Emily Tennant (Actor)
Born: August 09, 1990
Birthplace: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Trivia: Landed her first audition at age 10.Made her theatrical feature film debut in the 2001 sports drama The Rhino Brothers.Won the Leo Award for Best Actress in a Short Film in 2009 for her role in Valentines.First main television role was Ivy Young in the Canadian comedy fantasy series Mr. Young.Guest starred on the ABC series Once Upon A Time in 2018, playing Ilsa, in the episode "Flower Child."
Max Ryan (Actor)
Born: January 02, 1967
Trivia: Steel-hewn, barrel-chested screen performer Max Ryan sported a rugged, threatening image that immediately placed him in a tight genre niche in action movies; producers typically, though not always, cast him as the villain. Among other accomplishments, Ryan made one of his earliest appearances as a heavy opposite martial arts superstar Jet Li in Chris Nahon's action thriller Kiss of the Dragon (2001), played one of the nemeses of Sean Connery in Steve Norrington's muddled, roundly disappointing comic book-style adventure The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2003), and ushered in a sense of pure unadulterated evil with his portrayal of a psychotic, sadistic madman in Robby Henson's thriller Thr3e (2007). The following year, Ryan again starred as the villain, this time opposite Joan Allen and Jason Statham, in Death Race (2008), Paul W.S. Anderson's remake of the Corman outing Death Race 2000 (1975).
Patrice Cols (Actor)
Currie Graham (Actor)
Born: February 26, 1967
Birthplace: Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: Currie is his mother's maiden name. Notable early television co-starring roles included Suddenly Susan and NYPD Blue, appearing in the final season of both series. Performed with the the stage production and podcast troupe Thrilling Adventure Hour in 2009. Along with his fellow cast and crew members, filmed Cabin Fever: Patient Zero in the Dominican Republic during Hurricane Sandy in 2012.
Timothy Patrick Cavanaugh (Actor)
José Julián (Actor)
Weronika Rosati (Actor)
Gary Grubbs (Actor)
Born: November 14, 1949
Birthplace: Amory, Mississippi
Mattie Liptak (Actor)
Born: April 10, 1996
Casey Myers (Actor)
William Tomeoki (Actor)
Zero Kazama (Actor)
Born: September 27, 1982
Emily Marie Palmer (Actor)
Jacob McManus (Actor) .. Billingsley
Jaime Channing (Actor) .. Private Channing
Edward Delmore lll (Actor) .. Operator #1
Jerod Daniel Perez (Actor) .. Listening Sailor
Stan Houston (Actor) .. Man #1
Brian Keith Matney (Actor) .. Man #2
Kirk Jordan (Actor) .. Man #3
Charles Wiedman (Actor) .. Man #4
Patrick O'Driscoll (Actor) .. Man #5
Ladson Deyne (Actor) .. Submarine Commander
Bill Riales (Actor)
Joshua Dease (Actor) .. Reporter #1
Michael Brannon (Actor) .. Reporter #2
Zack Rukavina (Actor)
Marley Van Peebles (Actor) .. Sailor #2
Pete Riehm (Actor) .. Admiral Neyland
Jason Rice (Actor) .. Peleliu Officer
Rebecca Pena (Actor) .. Cigarette Girl
Charity Sills (Actor) .. Lady Of The Night
Sasha Feldman (Actor) .. Hollis
Shane Cavanaugh (Actor) .. Crewman #1
Judd Lormand (Actor) .. Lt. Carroll
Birthplace: Marshall, Texas, United States
Trivia: Was Raised in Houston, Texas.Lived in Saudi Arabia when he was young.Started acting at a young age in school plays.Moved along with his family to Lafayette, Louisiana, after returning to the United States.Was encouraged by his drama teacher in high school to pursue a career in the entertainment industry.Is an avid sports fan, especially wrestling.

Before / After
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Bonanza
12:01 pm