
Age: 58
male
Rhys Owain Evans (Welsh pronunciation: [r̥ɨːsˈivans]; born 22 July 1967), known as Rhys Ifans, is a Welsh actor. His portrayed roles in Notting Hill (1999), Kevin & Perry Go Large (2000), and Enduring Love (2004), in addition to Xenophilius Lovegood in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows—Part 1 (2010), Dr. Curt Connors / Lizard in The Amazing Spider-Man (2012) and Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021), and Grigori Rasputin in The King's Man (2021). His television roles include Hector DeJean in the Epix thriller series Berlin Station, Mycroft Holmes in the CBS series Elementary, and Otto Hightower in the HBO fantasy series House of the Dragon. Ifans was also formerly the frontman of the rock bands The Peth and Super Furry Animals. Description above from the Wikipedia article Rhys Ifans, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Rhys Ifans

Dr. Curt Connors
for Dr. Curt Connors in Spider-Man VS The Sinister Six
Suggested by miguelrodriguez

The film opens with chaos in the streets of New York as the Lizard (Dr. Curt Connors) resurfaces, mutated once again after years in hiding. Peter Parker, now a seasoned Spider-Man, responds—only to discover he’s not alone. Miles Morales, wearing a Spider-Man suit of his own, swings into the fight. The two work in sync, defeating the Lizard without killing him. Connors is cured and taken into custody, leaving Peter shaken but hopeful. Later that day, Miles reveals the truth: he’s been Spider-Man for a while. Peter calmly proves his own identity. The title sequence rolls. Peter and Miles now work together at F.E.A.S.T., where Peter slowly steps into a mentor role. But inside The Raft, a darker plan unfolds. Dr. Otto Octavius, imprisoned and broken by guilt, contacts Kraven the Hunter, calling in one final favor. Kraven launches a brutal assault on the prison, freeing Electro, Sandman, Vulture, and getting into contact with Quentin Beck—Mysterio. The Sinister Six are born. Mysterio’s motivation is deeply personal. Once a gifted illusionist and effects engineer tied to Oscorp and media networks, Quentin Beck built his career on crafting “truth.” Spider-Man’s exposure of corruption destroyed Beck’s credibility, reducing him to a joke in the public eye. Beck becomes obsessed with controlling reality itself—believing Spider-Man ruined the world’s faith in heroes. With the Six, Beck plans to erase Spider-Man’s legacy and replace it with his own manufactured myth. The Six wage coordinated war on the city. Sandman cripples infrastructure. Electro plunges entire districts into darkness. Vulture dominates the skies. Kraven hunts Spider-Man relentlessly. Mysterio floods the city with illusions—turning civilians against the heroes through staged footage and false deaths. Peter tries to keep Miles out of danger, but Miles refuses to stand aside. Felicia Hardy (Black Cat) joins them, providing intel and underworld access. Together, they uncover the Six’s endgame: a massive public spectacle engineered by Mysterio to broadcast Spider-Man’s downfall to the world. The final battle is catastrophic. Reality collapses under Mysterio’s illusions. Miles nearly dies at Electro’s hands. Kraven corners Peter in a brutal, primal fight. Watching Miles risk everything for strangers, Otto Octavius finally breaks, realizing the monster he’s become. Otto turns on the Six, sabotaging Beck’s tech and saving Peter. The battle ends in tragedy and sacrifice: Kraven is killed in a final hunt against Peter. Electro overloads and dies when Otto and Peter contain his power. Vulture is killed in a midair collapse after Miles and Felicia outmaneuver him. Mysterio, refusing defeat, triggers a lethal failsafe and is consumed by his own collapsing illusion. Only Otto and Flint Marko remain. Marko surrenders, begging for a chance to live for his daughter. Peter lets him go free. Otto prepares for prison—or death—but Peter quietly allows him to disappear, choosing redemption over punishment. The film ends with Peter and Mary Jane’s wedding. At peace, Peter retires as Spider-Man, passing the mantle fully to Miles Morales. As Miles swings into the skyline, Peter walks forward—no longer the hero the city needs, but the man he was always meant to be.