
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 Spider-Man: Last Stand
Suggested by matthewfenner

Set in the year 2030, this R-Rated Spider-Man film takes place in an alternate Raimiverse where the age of heroes has faded into myth. Peter Parker, scarred by decades of loss and haunted by Mary Jane’s death from cancer two years prior, lives in quiet isolation—his body broken, his spirit hollow. But when a rip in reality opens above New York, Peter is forced back into the web. From it emerges Parallel—Luke Bryan, a being from a dying universe who seeks to collapse all realities into one perfect existence, no matter how many worlds must burn to make it happen. As fragments of dimensions collide, ghosts of the past return in twisted forms, forcing Peter to confront the cost of his own heroism. When the remnants of the Avengers—older, fractured, and long disbanded—are drawn back together to stop Parallel’s multiversal annihilation, Peter becomes their emotional core, the last man still willing to believe in redemption. The battle rages across collapsing worlds, from the crumbling towers of New York to the void between universes, as Spider-Man faces not only Parallel but the reflection of every mistake he’s ever made. In the end, Peter must make the ultimate sacrifice—choosing between restoring the Multiverse or saving the last remnants of the life he’s lost—proving that even in a broken world, the meaning of power and responsibility never dies.