
Age: 58
male
Isaac Liev Schreiber (/ˈliːɛv ˈʃraɪbər/ LEE-ev SHRY-bər; born October 4, 1967) is an American actor. He has received numerous accolades, including a Tony Award and nominations for nine Primetime Emmy Awards and five Golden Globe Awards. Schreiber's early film roles include Mixed Nuts (1994), Party Girl (1995), The Daytrippers (1996), and Big Night (1996). He appeared in the first three Scream horror films (1996–2000), Ransom (1996), The Hurricane (1999), Hamlet (2000), Kate & Leopold (2001), The Manchurian Candidate (2004), The Painted Veil (2006), X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009), Pawn Sacrifice (2014), and Spotlight (2015). He acted in the Wes Anderson films Isle of Dogs (2018), The French Dispatch (2021), and Asteroid City (2023). He made his directorial film debut with Everything Is Illuminated (2005). He made his Broadway debut in In the Summer House (1992). He earned the Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play for playing Richard Roma in the David Mamet play Glengarry Glen Ross (2005). He was Tony-nominated for his roles in the Eric Bogosian play Talk Radio (2007), the Arthur Miller revival A View from the Bridge (2010) and the John Patrick Shanley revival Doubt (2024). He also acted in Les Liaisons Dangereuses (2016). For his television roles, he most notably portrayed the titular character in the Showtime drama series Ray Donovan (2013–2020). He reprised the role in the television film Ray Donovan: The Movie (2022). The role has earned him nominations for three Primetime Emmy Awards and four Golden Globe Awards. He also portrayed Orson Welles in the HBO film RKO 281 (1999) and Otto Frank in the Nat Geo miniseries A Small Light (2023). Description above from the Wikipedia article Liev Schreiber, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Liev Schreiber

Wilson Fisk
for Wilson Fisk in The Amazing Spider-Man 2
Suggested by miguelrodriguez

Before the opening credits, the film begins with a tragic prologue. Dr. Otto Octavius, once a brilliant and compassionate Oscorp scientist and close partner to Norman Osborn, watches his faith in Oscorp collapse. In a flashback, Norman secretly tests the Devil’s Breath serum on a young boy named Martin Li, an experiment that kills Li’s parents and sparks massive lawsuits. Disgusted, Otto leaves Oscorp under a settlement in which Norman agrees to fund him through monthly payments. Those payments allow Otto to found Octavius Industries—until Norman abruptly stops paying. Now broke, isolated, and living in a decaying apartment, Otto watches a news broadcast announcing Norman’s run for mayor. Enraged by Osborn’s rise, Otto destroys his apartment as the opening credits roll. The story resumes with Peter Parker in his junior year of high school. A new student, Mary Jane Watson, arrives, quickly catching the attention of Harry Osborn, beginning a relationship that grows throughout the film. Later we see Peter attending the grand opening of F.E.A.S.T., founded by Aunt May and Martin Li. Peter’s life remains a constant balancing act—maintaining friendships with Harry Osborn, Ned Leeds, Betty Brant, and Flash Thompson, while deepening his relationship with Gwen Stacy. When a police scanner alert hits his phone, Peter suits up and enters a darker chapter of his heroism. Spider-Man joins forces with Daredevil and The Punisher to dismantle Wilson Fisk’s criminal empire. The trio successfully brings down Fisk’s underground operations—temporarily—and sends Kingpin to The Raft, giving New York a brief sense of victory. Peter’s stress intensifies when he accepts a job at Octavius Industries, working directly under Otto, unaware of how close he is to disaster. At the film’s midpoint, Otto perfects his breakthrough: a system of four mechanical arms designed to enhance human capability. But Norman Osborn arrives, revealing that everything Otto built legally belongs to Oscorp. The seizure of Otto’s life’s work pushes him into a psychological collapse. As crime escalates, Spider-Man battles Shocker and Scorpion, defeating both and delivering them to The Raft. The sheer number of enhanced criminals forces Peter to question who is supplying them—and why. Returning to an abandoned Octavius Industries to repair his damaged suit, Peter uncovers terrifying secrets: prototype Rhino armor, Vulture’s wing harness, Shocker gauntlets, and evidence of a master engineer—the Tinkerer. In Otto’s office, Peter finds a board outlining a singular obsession: the murder of Norman Osborn. Peter rushes to stop Otto and arrives just as Doctor Octopus—now fully transformed—dangles Norman off the Oscorp tower. Otto drops him, but Spider-Man saves Norman at the last second. Climbing the tower, Peter discovers Gwen bound to an electrical structure. Otto reveals he knows Peter is Spider-Man, having discovered the suit during Peter’s investigation. Enraged and desperate, Peter fights Otto in a brutal showdown. Octavius throws Gwen from the tower, forcing Peter to choose. He delivers a final blow that knocks Otto unconscious, then dives after Gwen—saving her just in time. The film ends with Otto imprisoned in The Raft. During lunch, he encounters Adrian Toomes, who asks if Otto knows Spider-Man’s identity. Otto says no—then adds, “But I have an idea how we can find out.” Post-credit scene: Norman Osborn secretly works on a new serum, attempting to recreate the Super Soldier formula. Ignoring warnings, he injects himself. As Donald Menken watches in horror, Norman descends into psychosis—setting the stage for The Amazing Spider-Man 3.
