
Age: 76
male
Ronald Perlman (born April 13, 1950) is an American actor and voice-over actor. His best known roles are as Clay Morrow on Sons of Anarchy (2008–2013), Hellboy in Hellboy (2004) and its sequel Hellboy II: The Golden Army (2008), Vincent on the series Beauty and the Beast (1987–1990) for which he won a Golden Globe Award, Salvatore in The Name of the Rose (1986), Johner in Alien Resurrection (1997), Nino in Drive (2011), and Benedict Drask in Don't Look Up (2021). Perlman is also known as a collaborator of Hellboy director Guillermo del Toro, having roles in the del Toro films Cronos (1993), Blade II (2002), Pacific Rim (2013) and Nightmare Alley (2021). His voice-over work includes the narrator of the post-apocalyptic game series Fallout (1997–present), Clayface in the DC Animated Universe, Slade in Teen Titans (2003–2006), Mr. Lancer in Danny Phantom (2004–2007), Lord Hood in the video games Halo 2 (2004) and Halo 3 (2007), the Stabbington brothers in Tangled (2010), The Lich in Adventure Time (2011–2017), Xibalba in The Book of Life (2014) and Optimus Prime in both the Transformers: Power of the Primes (2018) animated series, and the film Transformers: Rise of the Beasts (2023).

Ron Perlman

Blockbuster
for Blockbuster in Nightwing (DCU Movie)
Suggested by nightwing2009

In Blüdhaven, Dick Grayson has learned to live in the narrow space between the mask and the man. As Nightwing, he keeps the city stable. As a civilian, he believes his past is settled. That illusion breaks when an old truth resurfaces: the death of the Flying Graysons was not an accident, and Dick himself was once a long-term investment of the Court of Owls — a child meant to become something else. Following a trail of money and quiet influence, Dick uncovers a criminal structure too old and too disciplined to belong to the streets. When he disrupts it, the response is precise and invisible. Investigations, lawsuits, disappearing witnesses. The pressure doesn’t fall on Nightwing, but on Dick Grayson, isolating him and stripping away his normal life piece by piece. The Court moves to correct its original mistake by sending William Cobb, a legendary Talon bound to Dick by blood. What follows is not just a physical conflict, but a confrontation over identity and choice. In the end, Dick survives by refusing the legacy written for him. Blüdhaven is spared, the Court retreats — but does not fall. Dick Grayson remains, not as a successor to Batman, but as something far more dangerous to the shadows: a reminder that even the most careful systems can fail.
