
Age: 55
male
Jonathan Daniel Hamm (born March 10, 1971) is an American actor. He is best known for his role as Don Draper in the period drama series Mad Men (2007–2015), for which he won numerous accolades, including a Primetime Emmy Award and two Golden Globe Awards. Hamm also acted in lead roles in the films Stolen (2010), Million Dollar Arm (2014), Keeping Up with the Joneses (2016), Beirut (2018), and Confess, Fletch (2022), as well as his supporting roles in The Town (2010), Sucker Punch (2011), Bridesmaids (2011), Baby Driver (2017), Tag (2018), Bad Times at the El Royale (2018), The Report (2019), Richard Jewell (2019), No Sudden Move (2021), and Top Gun: Maverick (2022). He also provided voice acting roles in the animated films Shrek Forever After (2010), Minions (2015), and Transformers One (2024). He has appeared in the Sky Arts series A Young Doctor's Notebook, the Channel 4 dystopian anthology series Black Mirror, the Amazon Prime fantasy series Good Omens, the FX superhero series Legion (2018), and the FX crime anthology series Fargo. He was Emmy-nominated for his roles in 30 Rock, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, and The Morning Show. He has also acted in Parks and Recreation and Curb Your Enthusiasm. Description above from the Wikipedia article Jon Hamm, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Gotham City breathes in shadows. The film opens in silence and rain as Thomas Wayne and Martha Wayne are murdered in a dark alley after a night at the theater. A young Bruce Wayne watches helplessly as his world collapses—an image that will haunt him long after Gotham forgets. Years later, Gotham is rotting from the inside out. A brutal wave of executions sweeps through the city’s criminal underworld. Each victim is found grotesquely mutilated, marked with ritualistic precision. The killings are soon traced to Victor Zsasz, a sadistic serial killer leaving scars not only on his own flesh, but on Gotham itself. Yet Zsasz is only the blade—not the hand guiding it. Behind the violence stands Black Mask, Roman Sionis, a calculating crime lord who uses fear, spectacle, and chaos to consolidate power. With the city’s mob families fractured, Black Mask seizes control, using Zsasz as his enforcer while hiding behind legitimate fronts and political connections. Working the case from the shadows is Batman—early in his war on crime, obsessive and methodical. His uneasy alliance with James Gordon, a weary but honest detective, allows him access to crime scenes the GCPD would rather keep sealed. Together, they uncover a conspiracy tying Gotham’s elite, its justice system, and organized crime into one festering wound. As the body count rises, a third player enters the hunt: Deadshot, a precision assassin hired to eliminate loose ends—including Zsasz himself. Deadshot’s presence turns Gotham into a battlefield, forcing Batman to confront an enemy who kills not out of madness, but professionalism. At the center of the web is Carmine Falcone, the aging crime patriarch who has survived every purge Gotham has ever seen. Falcone’s past dealings intertwine with the Waynes, raising uncomfortable questions for Bruce about his family’s legacy—and whether Gotham’s corruption was ever truly fought, or merely managed. Bruce’s only emotional anchor is Harvey Dent, his closest friend and an idealistic district attorney determined to save Gotham through the law. Their bond is genuine, hopeful—and fragile, strained by secrets Bruce cannot share and truths Harvey is not ready to face. A brief encounter with Selina Kyle, a thief navigating Gotham’s underbelly for her own survival, offers Bruce a glimpse of a different path—one driven not by vengeance, but escape. As Black Mask’s empire closes in on total control and Deadshot’s contract nears completion, Batman must choose what kind of symbol he will become. Not just a weapon in the dark—but a warning. The film concludes not with victory, but with realization: Gotham cannot be saved overnight. Justice here is slow, painful, and incomplete. And Batman is only just beginning.
