
Age: 37
male
Jamie Metcalfe Campbell Bower (born 22 November 1988) is an English actor, model and singer. He made his feature film debut in 2007 with a supporting role in Tim Burton's Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, before going on to feature in The Twilight Saga (2009–2012) and as the young Gellert Grindelwald in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 (2010) and Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (2018). Bower was part of the main cast of the fantasy series Camelot (2011, Starz) and Will (2017, TNT), both of which only ran for a single season each. From 2015 to 2020, he served as the frontman of London-based band Counterfeit. In 2020, he began releasing music as a solo artist. In 2022, Bower joined the cast of the Netflix science fiction horror series Stranger Things, where he plays Henry Creel/Vecna in the fourth and fifth seasons, a role for which he has garnered wide critical acclaim. On 19 December 2025, he reprised the role onstage in his Broadway debut, a surprise appearance in the final scene of Stranger Things: The First Shadow. Bower will reportedly appear in the third season of The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, as well as a starring role in the Screen Gems horror The Haunting in Wicker Park. Description above from the Wikipedia article Jamie Campbell Bower, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Jamie Campbell Bower

Jonathan Crane / Scarecrow
for Jonathan Crane / Scarecrow in FEAR THE BATMAN
Suggested by leosalec

Gotham is no longer just afraid of crime. It is afraid of Batman. In the aftermath of the city’s brutal reckoning, Batman has become an unavoidable presence—seen in reflections, felt in silence, whispered about in interrogation rooms. Crime has not vanished, but it has evolved. Fear now shapes Gotham’s underworld as much as greed once did. At the center of Gotham’s fragile recovery stands Harvey Dent, the city’s charismatic and relentless District Attorney. Backed by Batman’s unseen influence and the law’s full force, Dent wages war on organized crime, targeting the remnants of Carmine Falcone’s empire and his longtime rival Salvatore Maroni. To Bruce Wayne, Harvey is more than a political ally—he is a friend, a symbol of hope, and proof that Gotham might still be saved without masks. That hope begins to rot. As the mob fractures, a series of public, theatrical crimes grip the city—crimes designed not for profit, but for attention. Behind them is The Joker, an emerging figure whose presence infects Gotham like a disease. He does not seek control. He seeks reaction. Fear. Laughter in the wrong places. He orchestrates chaos to expose the lie beneath order, forcing Batman into confrontations that are psychological as much as physical. At the same time, a new weapon spreads through Gotham’s streets: a refined hallucinogenic toxin. Its source is Scarecrow, operating quietly in the shadows, testing fear itself as a means of domination. Victims are left broken, screaming, or catatonic—haunted by visions of Batman as a monster rather than a savior. As tensions rise, Maroni strikes back. In a public attack meant to shatter Gotham’s faith in justice, Harvey Dent is horribly disfigured. The city watches its golden boy fall—while Batman watches a friend disappear. Dent survives, but something inside him fractures. The law that once guided him becomes a coin flip. Justice becomes punishment. Two-Face is born. Bruce Wayne, already battling the weight of his crusade, now carries another responsibility: Dick Grayson, a sharp, angry orphan taken in after a tragedy that mirrors Bruce’s own. As the first Robin, Dick becomes both Bruce’s greatest risk and his only chance at breaking the cycle—challenging Batman’s obsession with fear by reminding him of compassion. A brief reunion with Selina Kyle offers Bruce clarity. Selina sees Gotham for what it is—a city that feeds on symbols—and warns him that fear alone will consume everything it touches. As Joker manipulates Dent’s descent, Scarecrow’s toxin floods the streets, and the mob tears itself apart, Batman is forced to confront the truth: fear can inspire—but it can also destroy. The film culminates in a citywide psychological collapse, where Batman must stop Two-Face not just as a criminal, but as a man he failed… while refusing to become the monster Joker believes him to be. Gotham survives—but scarred. And Batman learns that fear is a tool… not a foundation.