
Age: 23
male
Jaeden Martell (né Lieberher; born January 4, 2003) is an American actor. He began his career as a child actor, with roles in the comedy drama St. Vincent (2014) and science fiction film Midnight Special (2016). His performance in St. Vincent earned him a nomination for the Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Young Performer. After playing the title character in the drama The Book of Henry (2017), Martell's breakthrough came with his portrayal of Bill Denbrough in the supernatural horror films It (2017) and It Chapter Two (2019). This led to further leading roles in horror films, such as The Lodge (2019) and Mr. Harrigan's Phone (2022). Martell had a supporting role in Rian Johnson's mystery comedy Knives Out (2019). Venturing into projects with more mature themes, he played a reserved teenager accused of murder in the Apple TV+ miniseries Defending Jacob (2020). He has since starred in the comedy films Metal Lords (2022) and Y2K (2024). Description above from the Wikipedia article Jaeden Martell licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Jaeden Martell

Jack Spicer
for Jack Spicer in Looney Tunes: What’s Up Doc?
Suggested by themegacaster

When brilliant scientist Elmer Fudd creates a device that can turn anyone or thing into a being associated with the cartoon realm, the FBI are brought in to check if Fudd has any nefarious plans with the machine, when in reality he doesn’t, and is actually quite depressed and is about to contemplate suicide when an agent accidentally knocks him back into the device and is transformed. Coming out as a toon and now practically immortal, Fudd plans to use the device to turn the entire world this way, as he states “If I Can’t Die, No One Can!”. Meanwhile petty thief and prankster Bugs Bunny comes across his friends who overhear about Fudd’s plans, and because they view that reality and toons are meant to be in harmony and that one shouldn’t dominate over the other, they set out to end this plot.