
Age: 29
male
Mackenyu (新田 真剣佑, born November 16, 1996) is a Japanese actor born in Los Angeles, California. He is the son of actor and martial artist Sonny Chiba. He attended Beverly Hills High School in their Advanced Placement Program and appeared in a few films and TV shows while growing up. As a young child, Mackenyu had many interests including horseback riding, Yabusame, Kyokushin Karate (he was placed third at the US Kyokushin Karate Nationals), gymnastics, water polo, and wrestling (for which he became the school representative). He was also into music, playing piano since he was 10 years old, and later participated in the brass band of his high school in Beverly Hills, playing saxophone, and flute. At the age of 15, Mackenyu watched a movie of Haruma Miura and got inspired to pursue acting professionally in Japan. He held on to the dream of co-starring with the actor once he established his career, which then came true in the movie adaptation of Gunjō Senki (2021). Mackenyu landed his first feature film lead role in Take a Chance (2015) and was featured in the acclaimed short movie Tadaima (2015) for which he won a best supporting actor award at the Asians of Films festival. He moved to Japan later in the same year. His fame grew in Japan after landing the role of Eiji Tomari in Kamen Rider Drive: Surprise Future (2015). In 2016, he made his stage debut in the Japanese musical Boys Over Flower (Hana Yori Dango: The Musical), which prepared him for his future major roles in the stage-musicals ZEROTOPIA (2018) and Hoshi no Daichi ni Furu Namida (2020). He had a prominent role in the two part feature film Chihayafuru Part I & II (2016) which made him a big name in Japan. Mackenyu started to expand his acting opportunities in Hollywood with a supporting role in the film Pacific Rim: Uprising (2018). In 2021, he starred as the final villain, Yukishiro Enishi, in the Rurouni Kenshin series. He portrayed Scar in the live-action sequel of Fullmetal Alchemist (2022). He gained global popularity when he landed the role of Roronoa Zoro in the live-action series adaptation of One Piece (2023). Drawing on his martial arts background, Mackenyu performs his own stunts and is highly skilled in sword fighting.

Mackenyu

Leonardo
for Leonardo in Ninja Turtles: Gang War (Live Action Film)
Suggested by nihilus

In a neon-blasted haven of crime, each Turtle leads a gang of lethal martial artists, their territories bleeding into one another as Casey Jones’ rogue faction ignites fresh fury. When Shredder joins forces with a massive rogue’s gallery of killers, the city erupts into a brutal gang war of steel and blood, fought in rain-slick alleys under pulsing techno and EDM. One Turtle’s warnings linger unheard as bodies pile up, setting the stage for betrayal and ruin. A hyperviolent martial-arts neo-noir epic, drenched in cyberpunk atmosphere and framed as a gang-war crime saga. Shot in long, continuous takes that highlight the relentless choreography of urban combat, the film draws on the balletic precision of Kenji Tanigaki, the feral brutality of Timo Tjahjanto, the fluid intensity of Kensuke Sonomura, and the raw immediacy of Qin Pengfei. Visually, it fuses the neon-soaked nocturne of Wong Kar-Wai’s Fallen Angels with the icy, blood-slick brutality of Nicolas Winding Refn, all set to a pounding wall of techno and electronic dance music.