
Age: 56
male
Jason Clarke (born 17 July 1969) is an Australian actor. He has appeared in many TV series, and is known for playing Tommy Caffee on the television series Brotherhood. He has also appeared in many films, often as an antagonist. His film roles include Zero Dark Thirty (2012), White House Down (2013) The Devil All the Time (2020), Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014), Terminator Genisys (2015), Everest (2015), All I See Is You (2016), Mudbound (2017), Chappaquiddick (2017), First Man (2018), Pet Sematary (2019), and Oppenheimer (2023). In 2022, he starred in the HBO sports drama series Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty as former Los Angeles Lakers player turned coach Jerry West.

Jason Clarke

Detective Jaxson Marshall
for Detective Jaxson Marshall in Marvel Studios Wolverine: Creed
Suggested by matthewfenner

Set in 2025, Two years after the Avengers reversed Thanos’ Blip, Logan — the mutant known as Wolverine — drifts between the U.S. and Canada, haunted by memories of the Weapon X program and a world that moved on without him. When the Blip happened, he had just escaped the facility that turned him into a living weapon. Now, freshly returned and feral, Logan struggles to find peace in a time that no longer feels like his own. But peace dies hard when a ghost from his past resurfaces: Victor Creed, the savage mutant known as Sabretooth. Unlike Logan, Creed wasn’t snapped — he’s spent the last Six years carving his name into blood and legend, believing his brother was gone forever. Seeing Logan alive reignites his hatred — and his hunger for a final, definitive kill. As Logan tracks Sabretooth across snow-covered forests and burned-out cities, their shared history unfolds — brothers in pain, monsters by design. What begins as a manhunt becomes a war of survival between two living weapons bound by rage, guilt, and twisted loyalty. In this brutal, R-rated chapter of the MCU, Wolverine: Blood Feud strips away the superhero spectacle for something raw and primal — a story of beasts pretending to be men. Every clash between Logan and Creed is more savage than the last, building toward a final showdown where only one can walk away. For Logan, redemption might not come through saving the world — but by ending the nightmare that’s followed him since Weapon X.