
Age: 58
male
Aaron Edward Eckhart (born March 12, 1968) is an American actor and producer. Born in Cupertino, California, Eckhart moved to the United Kingdom at early age, when his father relocated the family. Several years later, he began his acting career by performing in school plays, before moving to Australia for his high school senior year. He left high school without graduating, but earned a diploma through a professional education course, and graduated from Brigham Young University (BYU) in 1994 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) degree in film. For much of the mid-1990s, he lived in New York City as a struggling, unemployed actor. As an undergraduate at BYU, Eckhart met director and writer Neil LaBute, who cast him in several of his own original plays. Five years later Eckhart made a debut as an unctuous, sociopathic ladies' man in LaBute's black comedy film In the Company of Men (1997). Under LaBute's guidance he worked in the director's films Your Friends & Neighbors (1998), Nurse Betty (2000), and Possession (2002). Eckhart gained wide recognition as George in Steven Soderbergh's critically acclaimed film Erin Brockovich (2000), and, in 2006, he received a Golden Globe nomination for his portrayal of Nick Naylor in Thank You for Smoking. He gained further mainstream breakout in 2008 when he starred in the blockbuster Batman film The Dark Knight as District Attorney Harvey Dent / Two-Face. Eckhart's other key roles include The Pledge (2001), The Core (2003), Paycheck (2003), Rabbit Hole (2010), Battle: Los Angeles (2011), Olympus Has Fallen (2013) and its sequel London Has Fallen (2016), I, Frankenstein (2014), Sully (2016), Midway (2019) and Line Of Duty (2019).

Aaron Eckhart

John brent
for John brent in legacy of the planet of the Apes
Suggested by navarrosilva

Apes takeing over the world until the end of the world in the past Centuries after humanity’s downfall, Earth is no longer a planet of men — it is a world ruled by apes. Across shattered continents and reclaimed jungles, tribes of intelligent apes have risen from Caesar’s ashes, building their own empires, guided by fragments of his philosophy — and haunted by their growing thirst for dominance. But deep in orbit, a remnant of humanity still drifts among the stars. Colonel John Bullock (Tom Hardy), a hardened pilot of the U.S. Space Force, awakens from decades of cryogenic stasis aboard a damaged orbital station. Cut off from Earth since the nuclear collapse, his return mission sends him plummeting into an unfamiliar world — one where the ruins of civilization lie buried under the roots of a new order After centuries of struggle between man and ape, peace was no longer possible. What began as scattered conflicts turned into a full-scale war for survival. Humanity’s cities fell one by one — New York, London, Beijing — all overtaken not by armies of soldiers, but by intelligent apes rising from the forests, mountains, and ruins of the old world. The apes had learned, adapted, and evolved faster than humans ever expected. Under the guidance of their new warlords — the successors of Caesar’s fractured line — they no longer sought coexistence. They sought dominion.





