
Age: 52
male
Andrew Lincoln (born Andrew James Clutterbuck; September 14, 1973) is an English actor. His first major role was as the character Egg in the BBC drama This Life (1996–1997). Lincoln later portrayed Simon Casey in the Channel 4 sitcom Teachers (2001–2003), Mark in the Christmas-themed romantic comedy film Love Actually (2003) and Dr. Robert Bridge in the ITV television series Afterlife (2005–2006). Beginning in 2010, Lincoln gained international fame for his portrayal of Rick Grimes, the lead character on the hit AMC post-apocalyptic horror television series The Walking Dead. For his portrayal of Rick Grimes, Lincoln won the Saturn Award for Best Actor on Television in 2015 and 2017. He departed the cast of The Walking Dead in 2018, but reprised the role of Rick in the 2024 Walking Dead Spin-off, The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live.

Andrew Lincoln

Norman osborn
for Norman osborn in Spider-Man: Surge of Vengeance
Suggested by matthewfenner

Three months into his life as Spider-Man, Peter Parker is still learning what it means to be a hero — and how much it’s already cost him. Still reeling from Uncle Ben’s death, Peter struggles to balance his double life as a broke high school student and a masked vigilante hunted by both criminals and the police. When an Oscorp electrical engineer named Max Dillon is caught in a catastrophic accident that turns him into a living conduit of raw energy, New York becomes a city on edge. Transformed by pain and rejection, Max becomes Electro, a man who can manipulate power itself — and who blames Spider-Man for the chaos that defines his existence. Spider-Man: Surge of Vengeance dives into the raw, violent heart of Peter’s first year behind the mask. As Electro electrifies the city’s grid, turning Manhattan into a neon battlefield, Peter faces a new kind of enemy — not just superpowered, but human, scarred, and driven by the same anger that once defined him. The R-rated intensity lays bare the consequences of heroism: shattered bones, burned skin, and moral lines crossed in the name of survival. In the film’s harrowing climax, Peter must choose between saving the city that fears him and saving the man who mirrors his own broken soul — proving that being Spider-Man isn’t about power, but the price you’re willing to pay for it.