
Age: 32
male
David Packard Corenswet (/ˈkɔːrənswɛt/CORE-in-SWET; born July 8, 1993) is an American actor. After graduating from Juilliard in 2016, he began guest-starring in television series, including House of Cards in 2018. He played lead roles in the Netflix series The Politician (2019–2020) and Hollywood (2020), both created by Ryan Murphy. In 2022, he starred in the films Look Both Ways and Pearl, as well as the HBO miniseries We Own This City. After supporting roles in the film Twisters and the miniseries Lady in the Lake (both 2024), he rose to prominence with his portrayal of the titular superhero in James Gunn's DC Universe film Superman (2025). Description above from the Wikipedia article David Corenswet, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

David Corenswet

Superman
for Superman in Batman: City of Madness
Suggested by matthewfenner

Gotham is dying — drowning in crime, corruption, and madness. Years into his crusade, Bruce Wayne has become a darker, more brutal version of the Batman, feared as much as he is revered. When a Returning force of chaos emerges from the shadows — The Joker, a sadistic terrorist with no clear motive beyond anarchy — Gotham spirals into unrelenting fear. Bodies pile up, the police are powerless, and every crime feels like a punchline to a joke only one man understands. As the Joker’s warped ideology infects the city, Batman is pushed to his breaking point, forced to confront not just the killer he hunts, but the monster he’s becoming in the process. Batman: City of Madness is a violent psychological thriller that strips both hero and villain to their rawest cores. With Alfred and Gordon barely holding him back from crossing the line, Bruce must decide whether to be Gotham’s savior or its executioner. The Joker’s reign of terror becomes a mirror — reflecting the city’s corruption, Batman’s fractured mind, and the fragile morality that separates vengeance from justice. In a blood-soaked climax set against a burning Gotham skyline, Batman faces the one truth he’s always denied: to stop the Joker, he may have to become just as mad.