
Age: 37
male
Born and raised in Whangarei, New Zealand, Milo Cawthorne developed a love for acting at a young age and participated in several productions in the local community theatre. But his talents took him further than just his hometown as he began appearing in several children's television shows, even starring in "P.E.T. Detectives" (2003) as Evan. Still, he made his home on stage and even performed as part of New Zealand's Young Shakespeare Company at the Globe Theatre in London. After unsuccessfully attempting to enroll in drama school and working as a pizza delivery boy for about a year, Cawthorne landed the role of bumbling ex-cartel member Ziggy Grover, Ranger Operator Series Green, on "Power Rangers RPM" (2009), which gave him exposure to a much larger audience than what he had been used to. Following this, he returned to the stage and participated in several theatre productions, including "The History Boys" (2009) with the Peach Theatre Company, and "360" (2010) for the New Zealand International Arts Festival. He also appeared in an episode of the miniseries "Underbelly NZ: Land of the Long Green Cloud" (2011). In late 2011, Cawthorne moved to Los Angeles, California to begin filming the independent horror feature "Blood Punch" (2013), which premiered at the 20th annual Austin Film Festival in October 2013 and won the Audience Award in the Dark Matters horror/thriller category. He has also appeared in several short films, including "Andy" (2011), "Mae and Ash" (2012), and "I Love L.A." (2013). Since then, Cawthorne has moved back to New Zealand and reprised his role as Young Gee in "360: A Theatre of Recollections" (2014). He will soon appear in a leading role in the New Zealand-produced television miniseries "When We Go To War" (2014), as well as the Auckland Theatre Company production of "Once On Chunuk Bair" (2014).

Milo Cawthorne

Max Commander
for Max Commander in Serious Squadron Gachiranger
Suggested by souzasphia_x

Five ordinary citizens are conscripted into an elite military unit—not by choice, but by necessity. When an otherworldly threat emerges from the shadows, the government activates Project Gachiranger, transforming reluctant recruits into humanity's last defense. Each member grapples with the weight of their new reality. Personal ambitions shatter against the demands of duty. Relationships fracture under impossible pressure. They must master devastating combat abilities while confronting the psychological cost of becoming weapons. As the enemy's true nature unfolds, the squadron discovers a horrifying truth: their transformation may be irreversible. Every battle pushes them closer to losing their humanity entirely. Trust erodes. Sacrifice becomes currency. In the crucible of warfare, these five discover that the greatest enemy isn't always external—sometimes it's the person you're becoming. They fight not for glory, but for survival. Not for victory, but for the chance to remain human.