Movies Starring Ty Hungerford
Total movies found: 4, viewing from 1 to 4
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Underbelly Files: Tell Them Lucifer Was Here
[ 2011, Australia ] starting from $1.99Actors: Brett Climo, Todd Lasance, Greg Stone, Jeremy Kewley, Ditch Davey, Don Hany, Christopher Bunworth, James Taylor, Daniel Whyte, Paul O'Brien, Jane Allsop, Dimitri Baveas, Annie Jones, Brigid Gallacher, Lee Cormie, Nick Pendragon, Adrian Dean, Ty Hungerford, Tim Ross, Francesca Waters, Craig Blumeris, Robert Taylor, Marshall Napier, Lois Collinder, Tony Porter, Hadrian Jonathan, Peter Lesley, Simon Todman, Simon Barbaro, Melissa Bergland, Cindy Carino, Jasmine Dare, Glenn Ellis, Saara Lamberg, Gina Morley, Shanti Pezet, Robert Ratti, David Ravenswood, Ray Tiernan, Heidi Valkenburg
Directors: Shawn Seet
Tell Them Lucifer was Here tells the true story of the cold-blooded murders of Victorian Police Officers Gary Silk and Rodney Miller who were gunned down in the line of duty in 1998 and the massive Police manhunt to catch their killers. The story centres on the investigation of the brutal murders under the direction of Detective Inspector Paul Sheridan and the Lorimer Taskforce. Tracking down the killers proved all but impossible and it was only through outstanding detective work, dogged persistence and sheer faith that the killers were brought to justice.
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Sisters of War
[ 2010, Australia ] starting from $1.99Actors: Claire van der Boom, Susie Porter, Byron J. Brochmann, Gerald Lepkowski, Masa Yamaguchi, Andy Minh Trieu, Sarah Snook, Emma Randall, Yutaka Izumihara, T. Maxwell Smith, Ty Hungerford, Helen Christinson, Matthew Wollaston, Glenn Chow, Masato Taguchi, Tomoki Miyamoto, Kristopher Bos, Michael Browning, Paulini Curuenavuli, Koichi Waki, Mitch Kennedy, Louis Toshio Okada, Michael Knott, Helen Cassidy, Ben Taylor, Emma Schofield, Andy de Lore, Shinji Ikefuji
Directors: Brendan Maher
In January 1942, the Japanese war machine thundered across South East Asia. In its path lay a tiny Catholic mission station, Vunapope. Here a handful of Australian nurses took refuge along with a number of wounded Australian soldiers. Abandoned by their commanding officers, they were left to face the Japanese alone. Sisters of War is inspired by the true story of two extraordinary Australian women, Lorna Whyte (now Johnston), an army nurse and Sister Berenice Twohill, a Catholic nun from country New South Wales who was stationed at Vunapope. Although they were two very different women, their friendship would survive the incredible events that followed. When the Japanese arrived at Vunapope, the nurses and their patients were saved from massacre by the appearance of the mission’s leader, Bishop Leo Scharmach. This astonishing man bluffed the Japanese into believing that he was a personal friend of Hitler and that the mission was Hitler’s property. Any massacre of Australians would be a declaration of war on Germany. In the dark days that followed, Sister Berenice and Lorna found themselves facing starvation, beatings and torture. Their beliefs were constantly tested, as was their friendship. Sister Berenice idolised Bishop Scharmach; Lorna was convinced he was a collaborator. The tiny mission became a setting for betrayal, heroism and death. And all the normal rules of war were broken. The nuns found themselves looking after 15-year-old weeping and homesick Japanese soldiers. The Americans, their allies, flew over every night and bombed them savagely. The Japanese executed their own wounded soldiers who were too maimed to fight. After six months, Lorna and Sister Berenice were separated. The Australian nurses were sent to Yokohama to be part of a prisoner exchange. But the exchange program collapsed and the nurses found themselves trapped in war time Japan, freezing and ravaged by disease. At the same time the inhabitants of Vunapope were taken to a dark, uninhabited jungle valley where they would be safe from air raids. Sisters of War is adapted from the wartime diaries and interviews with Lorna Johnston (nee Whyte), Sister Berenice and others who survived. The story of their captivity, their friendship, their will to survive and their extraordinary courage has never been told.


