From Time to Time


3:20 pm - 4:20 pm, Thursday, December 25 on 5STAR (32)

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About this Broadcast

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A 13-year-old boy is evacuated to his grandmother's house during the Second World War. He discovers that her ancestral home is haunted by ghosts, and as he grows more familiar with the spirits he learns more about his family's long-buried secrets. Family fantasy adventure, starring Alex Etel, Maggie Smith, Timothy Spall, Dominic West and Carice van Houten


2009 HD subtitles
Adventure Fantasy Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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Alex Etel (Actor) .. Tolly
Maggie Smith (Actor) .. Linnet
Timothy Spall (Actor) .. Boggis
Dominic West (Actor) .. Caxton
Carice van Houten (Actor) .. Maria Oldknow
Eliza Bennett (Actor) .. Susan
Hugh Bonneville (Actor) .. Capt Oldknow
Douglas Booth (Actor) .. Sefton

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Alex Etel (Actor) .. Tolly
Maggie Smith (Actor) .. Linnet
Born: December 28, 1934 in Ilford, Essex
Best Known For: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie and Downton Abbey.
Early-life: Margaret Nathalie Smith was born on December 28, 1934, in Ilford, Essex. She was named after her Glaswegian secretary mother. Her father was a pathologist from Newcastle. Her older twin brothers were both architects. At the outbreak of the Second World War, the family moved to Oxford. Smith left school at 16 after deciding an academic career wasn't for her. She immediately joined the Oxford Playhouse, spending the next four years testing her skills in a wide variety of roles.
Career: Smith rose to prominence on stage during the 1950s thanks to regular West End roles. Her first film, 1956's Child in the House, didn't set the box office alight, but she eventually gained international acclaim thanks to her role in Othello nine years later. She won an Oscar for 1969's The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie and has since appeared in such acclaimed productions as California Suite (for which she picked up another Academy Award), A Room with a View, and Gosford Park. She became a Dame of the British Empire in 1990. More recently, Smith gained a new fan base thanks to her role as Professor Minerva McGonagall in the Harry Potter movies, appeared in the films Ladies in Lavender and Keeping Mum, and TV series Downton Abbey. She has also battled breast cancer.
Quote: "It's true I don't tolerate fools but then they don't tolerate me, so I am spiky. Maybe that's why I'm quite good at playing spiky elderly ladies."
Trivia: Clint Eastwood is a big fan and for years has harboured the dream of working with her.
Timothy Spall (Actor) .. Boggis
Born: February 27, 1957 in London
Best Known For: Playing Barry in Auf Wiedersehen, Pet.
Early-life: Timothy Leonard Spall was born on February 27, 1957, in London, and brought up on a Battersea council estate. As a teenager, he considered joining the Army, but changed his mind after playing the Cowardly Lion in his school's version of The Wizard of Oz. He applied for Rada because his drama teacher - on whom he had a secret crush - suggested he should become an actor. He was named the most promising actor of 1978 when he left the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (Rada).
Career: Spall appeared on stage with Birmingham Rep and the Royal Shakespeare Company before his movie debut in 1979's Quadrophenia. His big break came playing Barry in Auf Wiedersehen, Pet in 1983. He received Bafta TV nominations for Our Mutual Friend, Shooting The Past and Vacuuming Completely Nude In Paradise. Other memorable projects include Secrets and Lies, Life Is Sweet, Topsy-Turvy, Vanilla Sky, Still Crazy, Frank Stubbs Promotes and several of the Harry Potter movies. He received an OBE in 1999. Always in demand, more recent work includes Pierrepoint, The Street, Enchanted, Oliver Twist, The Damned United, The Fattest Man in Britain, The King's Speech, The Syndicate, and Mr Turner.
Quote: "I'm a decent, jolly, fat guy."
Dominic West (Actor) .. Caxton
Born: October 15, 1969 in Sheffield
Best Known For: Playing McNulty in The Wire.
Early-life: Dominic Gerard Fe West was born on October 15, 1969, in Sheffield. He's of Irish descent but grew up in a village just outside the South Yorkshire city. His father, George, owned a plastics factory. His mother, Moya, was a housewife. West is the youngest of six children and was educated at Eton, where he was encouraged to take up acting as a career. After leaving school, he spent several months as a cattle-herder in Argentina before gaining an English Literature degree from Trinity College, Dublin.
Career: West enjoyed early success on the stage, and appeared in several movies, including Spice World and Star Wars: Episode 1 - The Phantom Menace before taking a break to join the acrobatic Argentinean circus De La Guarda. He then had a supporting role in Chicago before landing the part of drunken but lovable detective McNulty in hugely acclaimed TV series The Wire. West has also appeared in 300, Hannibal Rising and The Devil's Whore. In 2011 he received critical acclaim for his roles as TV news anchor Hector Madden in the 1950s-set BBC drama The Hour and serial killer Fred West in ITV1 drama Appropriate Adult. He also continues to appear on stage, most notably in his native Sheffield.
Quote: "I don't know why British actors are getting big parts in American TV shows. Maybe it's because we're cheap."
Trivia: Away from acting, he's a Sheffield Wednesday supporter.
Carice van Houten (Actor) .. Maria Oldknow
Eliza Bennett (Actor) .. Susan
Hugh Bonneville (Actor) .. Capt Oldknow
Born: November 10, 1963 in London
Best Known For: Downton Abbey.
Early-life: Born Hugh Richard Bonneville Williams on November 10, 1963, in London. When he was younger he was often mistaken for rugby hero Will Carling. After leaving school with good exam results, he was accepted by Cambridge University, where he was taught theology by Dr Rowan Williams, the former Archbishop of Canterbury. "Everything he said went completely over my head," says Bonneville of Williams's lectures. He originally wanted to be a lawyer, but decided to tread the boards instead.
Career: Following a spell on stage, Bonneville made his TV debut in teen sitcom Dodgem. He spent the next few years dividing his time between theatre, TV and film work, having small parts in such projects as The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes, Cadfael, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Tomorrow Never Dies, Bugs, and Mosley. He had a regular role in sitcom Holding the Baby, but finally became a recognisable face thanks to the movie Notting Hill in 1999. Since then he's appeared in The Cazalets, Madame Bovary, The Gathering Storm, Tipping the Velvet, Doctor Zhivago, Twenty Twelve, and Love Again. He won rave reviews for his role in the TV comedy Freezing and Filth: The Mary Whitehouse Story. However, he's become a TV superstar on both sides of the Atlantic in recent years thanks to his starring role in period drama Downton Abbey. Recent projects have included W1A and The Monuments Men.
Quote: "I was once congratulated in Oxford Street for my brilliant portrayal of Mr Darcy, so apparently I looked like Colin Firth when I had curly hair. I reckon I could play him in a biopic."
Trivia: He is a patron of the London children's charity Scene & Heard and medical relief charity Medical Emergency Relief International.
Douglas Booth (Actor) .. Sefton
Julian Fellowes (Director)
Born: August 17, 1949 in Cairo
Best Known For: Winning the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 2002 for Gosford Park and creating Downton Abbey.
Early-life: Julian Alexander Kitchener-Fellowes was born in Cairo on August 17, 1949. He is the youngest son of Peregrine Fellowes (a diplomat) and his first wife, Olwen. Peregrine purchased the title of Lord of the Manor of Tattershall from the previous Lord of the Manor, making Julian the fourth person to hold it. Julian was educated at Ampleforth College; Magdalene College, Cambridge, and the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art.
Career: He completed his training in repertory theatre before making his West End acting début in A Touch of Spring by Sam Taylor at the Comedy Theatre. He has also played the Criterion, the Gielgud, the Vaudeville and the National Theatre. As an actor, he is probably best known for his portrayal of the incorrigible Lord Kilwillie in the popular series Monarch of the Glen. Other acting credits include Our Friends in The North, and Sharpe, alongside plenty of cinema hits. As a TV writer, he is responsible for creating scripts for Little Lord Fauntleroy, which won an International Emmy, and Bafta-nominated The Prince and the Pauper, which he also produced. Since his Oscar success with Gosford Park, he has written a novel called Snobs, and penned the scripts for West End musical Mary Poppins, the films Vanity Fair and Young Victoria, and the TV sensation Downton Abbey. He took up a seat in the House of Lords in 2011.
Quote: "The wonderful thing about King Oscar is he makes all things possible, although a lot of the time you do keep thinking, 'Moi?'."
Trivia: Married Emma Joy Kitchener, lady-in-waiting to Princess Michael of Kent, in 1990. He proposed 20 minutes after meeting her. They have one son.