
Age: 45
female
Élodie Yung (French: [elɔdi juŋ]; born 22 February 1981) is a French actress. She is best known for her roles as Elektra Natchios in the 2016 second season of the Marvel Cinematic Universe Netflix series Daredevil and The Defenders, as well as Thony De La Rosa on the 2022 Fox series The Cleaning Lady. Yung was born in Paris on 22 February 1981. Her father is Cambodian and her mother is French. She grew up in Seine-Saint-Denis. Her father enrolled her in karate classes at age 9, and she eventually became a black belt in her late teens. Yung earned a law degree at the University of Paris with the intention of becoming a judge. However, at the age of 29, she instead pursued acting at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. Yung began acting in 2002, in the French television series La vie devant nous, and made her film debut as the female lead Tsu in 2004's Les fils du vent. She followed this with a performance as gang lord Tao in District 13: Ultimatum. Yung returned to TV for the first three seasons of the successful police series Les Bleus with Clémentine Célarié. Yung appeared briefly in the 2011 film The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo as Miriam Wu, a romantic interest of Lisbeth Salander, and followed this with roles as the ninja Jinx in 2013's G.I. Joe: Retaliation and Gods of Egypt (2016), as the goddess Hathor. In 2016 she also starred as Amelia Roussel in the action comedy The Hitman's Bodyguard alongside Ryan Reynolds and Samuel L. Jackson. Yung's breakthrough performance was Elektra Natchios in season 2 of Daredevil in 2016. She reprised the role in 2017 in The Defenders. In 2020, Yung played the role of Catherine in the Disney+ film Secret Society of Second-Born Royals. In 2022, Yung began starring as Thony in the Fox crime drama series The Cleaning Lady. The show was renewed for its fourth season in 2024, with Yung set to return. In August 2018, Yung gave birth to a daughter with actor Jonathan Howard. Description above from the Wikipedia article Élodie Yung, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Élodie Yung

Dalia Al Ghul
for Dalia Al Ghul in HEART OF THE BATMAN
Suggested by miguelrodriguez

Gotham is drowning. In the aftermath of the Riddler’s final act of defiance, the city’s water dams are destroyed, submerging entire districts beneath dark, freezing floodwaters. Gotham becomes unrecognizable—streets swallowed, buildings half-buried, the line between land and water erased. Emergency lights flicker across the surface like dying stars. Batman moves through a city in collapse. As order crumbles, something ancient rises from the depths. Killer Croc emerges from the flooded undercity, a creature shaped by neglect and survival. To Gotham, he is a monster. To Batman, he is a symptom—another soul left behind when the city failed itself. But Croc is not the greatest threat. From the frozen shadows comes Mister Freeze, a man driven not by conquest, but desperation. Victor Fries exploits Gotham’s ruined infrastructure, plunging entire neighborhoods into unnatural cold. His goal is singular: preserve what little life he has left—his wife—no matter the cost to the city. His technology turns water into weapons, ice into prisons, and Gotham into a morgue-in-waiting. As Freeze’s control spreads, Gotham’s fractured power players re-emerge. Salvatore Maroni attempts to reclaim influence through black-market relief and flooded trade routes, while Poison Ivy views the destruction as nature’s reckoning. Ivy nurtures life amid the ruins, allowing plants to overtake drowned districts—beautiful, suffocating, and deadly. To her, Gotham deserves to be reclaimed by the earth. Batman finds himself caught between extinction and preservation. From the shadows, Talia al Ghul arrives with quiet purpose. She challenges Bruce not as an enemy, but as a question—offering a future where Gotham is allowed to fall so something better can rise. Her presence forces Bruce to confront a truth he’s long avoided: not every city can be saved the way it was. Amid the chaos, Bruce takes in Tim Drake, a brilliant, observant teenager who uncovers Batman’s identity not through trauma, but intellect. Tim becomes Robin not out of anger, but belief—believing Batman can be more than vengeance. Where Bruce once taught fear, Tim teaches purpose. As Freeze prepares to lock Gotham into permanent winter, Batman uncovers the truth behind his crusade—not madness, but love twisted by loss. In a city defined by broken hearts, Freeze reflects Bruce’s own path if grief is allowed to harden into cruelty. The final confrontation is not a spectacle, but a plea. Batman refuses to let Gotham become a frozen grave—not by destroying Freeze, but by stopping him while honoring the humanity he still clings to. Ivy retreats into the green, Croc vanishes beneath the water, and Talia fades back into legend. The floodwaters remain. Gotham is scarred. But in the cold, Batman chooses compassion over control. The film ends with Bruce standing in the ruins—no longer a symbol of fear, but of endurance. The heart of Gotham still beats. And so does the Batman.