
Age: 62
male
Michael Charles Chiklis (/ˈtʃɪklɪs/; born August 30, 1963) is an American actor. He is best known for his role as Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) Detective Vic Mackey on the FX police drama The Shield (2002–2008), for which he won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series in 2002 and was nominated in 2003. Other starring television roles of his include Commissioner Tony Scali on the ABC police drama The Commish (1991–1996), Chris Woods in Daddio (2000), Jim Powell on the ABC science-fiction comedy-drama No Ordinary Family (2010–2011), Vincent Savino in the CBS crime drama Vegas (2012), Dell Toledo in American Horror Story: Freak Show (2014), and Nathaniel Barnes in Gotham (2015–2017). In film, he is best known for his roles as The Thing in two Fantastic Four films (2005–2007), George Callister in Eagle Eye (2008), Terry Eidson in When the Game Stands Tall (2014), and Father Dave in Hubie Halloween (2020). Description above from the Wikipedia article Michael Chiklis, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Michael Chiklis

The Thing
for The Thing in Sam Raimi The Avengers (2010)
Suggested by juarezmmsilva

Title: Avengers Directed by: Sam Raimi Synopsis: When a secret AI called Ultron activates for the first time, it sees humanity as the root of chaos—and begins its mission to "save" the world through control and extinction. As cities fall under mechanical silence, a scattered group of strangers begins to rise: Spider-Man, young and overmatched. Agent Venom, a soldier bonded to a violent alien. Captain America, a leader without a team. Iron Man, haunted by the monster he may have created. The Fantastic Four, returning from a broken dimension. Thor, warned by Asgardian omens. Blade, Ghost Rider, Daredevil, and The Punisher, battling cyber-demons in the shadows. Wolverine, dragged into the war when Ultron targets mutants. Hulk, the only force Ultron couldn’t predict. They don’t trust each other. They weren’t meant to be a team. But as Ultron prepares to rewrite life itself, they must stand—together. Avengers is a Raimi-style horror-action epic about heroes forged not by destiny, but by desperation