Breaking Point 35 years old

Some Men Are Prisoners Of War. He Was A Prisoner Of Deception.

With D-Day less than 72 hours off, top US intelligence officer Jefferson Pike (Corbin Bernsen), is captured by the enemy. Pike, one of handful of officers who know where the allies will strike, is a professional who the Nazis know will never succumb to torture. They hatch a diabolical plan to deceive him into thinking that the war is over and he's recuperating from memory loss in a US hospital in Germany. His doctor (John Glover) and nurse (Joanna Pacula) head an elite Nazi psychological team that attempt to convince Pike into revealing the top secret. But as time slips away, Pike's captors decide he must reach his BREAKING POINT... or die.

Credits

Breaking Point Cast

Name Character
Andrew Divoff He was 34, now 69 years old as Aide
Lawrence Pressman He was 50, now 85 years old as Gen. Smith
Joanna Pacula She was 32, now 67 years old as Anna / Diana
Ken Jenkins He was 48, now 84 years old as Col. Lowe
Corbin Bernsen He was 34, now 70 years old as Pike
John Glover He was 45, now 80 years old as Dr. Gerber
Dennis Creaghan He was 47, now 82 years old as Ungerland
David Marshall Grant He was 34, now 69 years old as Osterman
Alan Toy He was 39, now 74 years old as Leroy
Douglas Roberts He was 70, 57 years old when he died as Dr. Johns

Breaking Point Crew

Name Department
Debra Neil-Fisher as Editor. She was 31 (now 66) years old Editing
Carl K. Hittleman as Story. Writing
J.A.C. Redford as Original Music Composer. He was 36 (now 71) years old Sound
Stanley R. Greenberg as Writer. He was 61 (74) years old when He died Writing
Stephen Storer as Production Design. Art
Sharon Bialy as Casting. Production
Jordan Kerner as Producer. He was 39 (now 74) years old Production
Jon Avnet as Producer. He was 39 (now 75) years old Production
Lisa Lindstrom as Producer. She was 77 (81) years old when She died Production
Breaking Point poster
Breaking Point (35 years)

Some Men Are Prisoners Of War. He Was A Prisoner Of Deception.

  • Release day: Friday, August 18, 1989
  • Runtime: 100 minutes