
Age: 18
male
Born and raised in Southern California, Nicholas Crovetti began his acting career at 7 years-old appearing as 'Max Wright' in HBO's Emmy Award-winning drama series Big Little Lies, playing one of the twin sons (alongside his real-life twin brother Cameron) of Nicole Kidman and Alexander Skarsgård. Nominated for a Screen Actor's Guild Award for Best Ensemble Drama, Nicholas went on to appear in the show's critically-acclaimed 2nd season with the opportunity to act alongside multiple Academy Award-winning actress Meryl Streep. Nicholas can next be seen as 'Danny Glick' in the New Line/Warner Bros' adaptation of Stephen King's best-selling novel Salem's Lot directed by Gary Dauberman. Produced by horror maestro James Wan, the film features an ensemble cast which includes Lewis Pullman, Pilou Asbaek, Makenzie Leigh, Bill Camp and Alfre Woodard. Nicholas can also soon be seen starring opposite Academy Award-nominated actress Naomi Watts and his twin brother Cameron in Prime Video's English-language adaptation of the cult horror film Goodnight Mommy directed by Matt Sobel. Nicholas recently completed filming the highly-anticipated action-thriller Boy Kills World in South Africa, in which he and his brother Cameron portray a young version of Bill Skarsgård's 'Boy' character (in yet another acting turn with the Skarsgård family). Directed by Moritz Mohr and produced by Sam Raimi and Roy Lee, the film also stars Jessica Rothe, Michelle Dockery, Sharlto Copley, Andrew Koji, Famke Janssen and legendary martial arts master Yayan Ruhian. Nicholas' previous credits include co-starring in the dramatic crime thriller Brothers By Blood with Maika Monroe, Joel Kinnaman and Ryan Philippe, Universal's horror-thriller Oracle with Heather Graham, the horror-fantasy Witch Hunt with Elizabeth Mitchell, indie French drama Anywhere With You with Betsy Brandt and Lorelei Linklater, as well as appearing in a guest starring role on the hit ABC comedy Black-ish. Nicholas also lends his voice and singing talents to the character of 'Iggy Peck' in Netflix's animated series Ada Twist, Scientist which was recently nominated for a 38th annual Television Critics Association Award.

Nicholas Crovetti

Ned Leeds
for Ned Leeds 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.