
Age: 57
male
Brendan James Fraser (born December 3, 1968) is an American-Canadian actor. Fraser had his breakthrough in 1992 with the comedy Encino Man and the drama School Ties. He gained further prominence for his starring roles in the comedies With Honors (1994) and George of the Jungle (1997) and emerged as a star playing Rick O'Connell in The Mummy trilogy (1999–2008). He took on dramatic roles in Gods and Monsters (1998), The Quiet American (2002), and Crash (2004), and further fantasy roles in Bedazzled (2000) and Journey to the Center of the Earth (2008). Fraser's film work slowed from the late 2000s to mid-2010s due to the poor box office performances, and various health and personal problems, including the fallout from a sexual assault committed against him in 2003 by Philip Berk, the then-president of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. Fraser branched into television with roles in the Showtime drama The Affair (2016–2017), the FX series Trust (2018), and the Max series Doom Patrol (2019–2023). His film career was revitalized by roles in Steven Soderbergh's No Sudden Move (2021) and Darren Aronofsky's The Whale (2022). Fraser's starring role as an obese gay man in the latter earned him critical acclaim and numerous accolades, including the Academy Award for Best Actor, becoming the first Canadian to win this category. Description above from the Wikipedia article Brendan Fraser, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Brendan Fraser

Doc Ock
for Doc Ock in Spider-Man: Rise of the Ock
Suggested by matthewfenner

A year after the Green Goblin’s rampage left Aunt May and Captain Stacy dead, Peter Parker begins his senior year at Midtown High carrying the crushing guilt of two lives he couldn’t save. Though still protecting New York as Spider-Man, he’s colder, more ruthless — a hero losing sight of who he once was. When a brilliant scientist and Oscorp rival, Dr. Otto Octavius, unveils an experimental fusion reactor meant to revolutionize clean energy, tragedy strikes again. A catastrophic failure fuses four mechanical arms to his body, warping his mind and birthing Doctor Octopus — a man convinced he must “save the world” by destroying it first. As Otto’s intellect turns to madness, New York becomes his laboratory, and Spider-Man his greatest obstacle. Spider-Man: Rise of the Ock is an R-rated collision of grief, obsession, and redemption. Peter sees in Otto the reflection of everything he’s becoming — brilliant, broken, and blinded by loss. As Doc Ock’s rampage threatens to consume the city, Peter is forced to face his darkest fears: that being Spider-Man may cost him his soul. With Gwen pulling him back from the edge, he must find the strength to save a man who’s beyond saving. In a brutal, high-stakes finale across collapsing bridges and burning streets, Spider-Man fights not just to stop Doc Ock, but to prove to himself that compassion can still survive in a world built on pain.