
Age: 36
male
Jack Andrew Lowden (born June 2, 1990) is a Scottish actor. Following a four-year stage career, his first major international onscreen success was in the 2016 BBC miniseries War & Peace, which led to starring roles in feature films. Starring as River Cartwright in the Apple TV series Slow Horses since 2020, he has received nominations for a Primetime Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award. Lowden starred as Eric Liddell in the 2012 play Chariots of Fire in London. In 2014, he won an Olivier Award and the Ian Charleson Award for his role as Oswald in Richard Eyre's 2013 adaptation of Ibsen's Ghosts. In 2013, he began to take on substantial roles in British television series and feature films, including The Tunnel (2013) and '71 (2014). He also had leading roles in the BBC miniseries The Passing Bells (2014) and War & Peace (2016). Other screen roles include the title role as golfing legend Tommy Morris in Tommy's Honour (2016); the starring role of Morrissey in the biopic England Is Mine (2017); a main-cast role as an RAF fighter-pilot in Christopher Nolan's Dunkirk (2017); a starring role in the Scottish Highlands thriller Calibre (2018, for which he won the British Academy Scotland Award for Best Film Actor); Lord Darnley in Mary Queen of Scots (2018); a starring role as a plantation owner in 19th-century Jamaica in the 2018 BBC miniseries The Long Song; and as Zak "Zodiac" Bevis in the 2019 comedy-drama WWE film Fighting with My Family. Description above from the Wikipedia article Jack Lowden, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Jack Lowden

Percy Bysshe Shelley
for Percy Bysshe Shelley in Story of The Monster: A Tale of Mary Shelley (Biopic)
Suggested by kaueoliveira

The film, "Story of The Monster," is a Gothic psychological drama that eschews the traditional literary biopic structure to focus on the brief, intensely creative, and tragic period in Mary Shelley's (née Godwin) life that led to the creation of Frankenstein. The story begins with Mary as a young, intellectual woman, fleeing her conventional life to enter a passionate, morally complex, and tumultuous relationship with the romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. Their lives are a whirlwind of radical ideas, intellectual fire, and reckless emotional abandon. The central narrative is set during the infamous "Year Without a Summer" (1816) when Mary, Percy, and Lord Byron were confined indoors at Villa Diodati. The film uses the dreary atmosphere, the competitive intellectualism, and the ghosts of Mary's own personal tragedies—including the loss of her infant child—to fuel her imagination. The Monster's creation is visualized not as a simple writing act, but as a direct, psychological manifestation of Mary's deepest fears: the horror of birth and death, the guilt of ambition, and the feeling of intellectual rejection. The story culminates with the publishing of Frankenstein, but the focus remains on the author's internal life—a woman who brought a profound, timeless horror to life by grappling with her own devastating grief and the isolation of her genius.