
Age: 50
male
Charles Peckham Day (born February 9, 1976) is an American actor, writer, and producer. He is best known for playing Charlie Kelly on the FX dark comedy It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia (2005–present), which he stars with Rob McElhenney, Kaitlin Olson, Glenn Howerton and Danny DeVito, and he is also a writer and an executive producer. In 2011, he was nominated for a Critics' Choice Television Award and a Satellite Award for the role. He subsequently co-created the Fox sitcom The Cool Kids (2018–2019) with Paul Fruchbom and the Apple TV+ comedy Mythic Quest (2020–2025) with McElhenney and Megan Ganz. In film, Day is best known for his performances as biologist Dr Newton Geiszler in Guillermo del Toro's science-fiction monster movie Pacific Rim (2013) and its sequel Pacific Rim Uprising (2018), Dale Arbus in the comedy Horrible Bosses (2011) and sequel Horrible Bosses 2 (2014), and teacher Andy Campbell in the comedy Fist Fight (2017). He is also known for his voice roles in Monsters University (2013), The Lego Movie film franchise (2014–2019) and the Nintendo franchise character Luigi in The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023). He made his directorial debut with Fool's Paradise in 2023. Description above from the Wikipedia article Charlie Day, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

When Elena, a reclusive photo archivist, inherits an ornate mirror from her estranged mother's estate, she begins to see a different version of herself in its reflection each morning. At first, the reflections are subtle distortions — older, younger, bruised, beaming — but soon they begin to speak, offering cryptic warnings, forgotten memories, and intimate truths she’s never told anyone. As the mirror’s presence grows more invasive, Elena finds her own identity unraveling, her memories shifting, and time bending around her. Desperate to understand what's real, Elena turns to therapy, only to discover even her therapist's reflection speaks in riddles she can’t explain. When one reflection refuses to leave — a version of Elena who claims to have made all the right choices — the line between mirror and reality dissolves. With her sense of self fracturing, Elena must confront a terrifying truth: she may not be the original, and the one who is wants her life back.

