
Age: 57
male
David Michael Bautista Jr. (born January 18, 1969) is an American actor and retired professional wrestler. Regarded as one of his generation's most prolific professional wrestlers, he rose to fame for his multiple stints in WWE between 2002 and 2019. Bautista began his wrestling career in 1999 and signed with WWE (then WWF) in 2000. From 2002 to 2010, he gained fame under the ring name Batista, initially as a member of Evolution. He would go on to win the WWE Championship twice, the World Heavyweight Championship four times (with his first reign remaining the longest in history at 282 days), the World Tag Team Championship three times (twice with Ric Flair and once with John Cena), and the WWE Tag Team Championship once (with Rey Mysterio). He also won the 2005 and 2014 Royal Rumble matches and subsequently headlined WrestleMania 21 and WrestleMania XXX, with the former being one of the top five highest-grossing PPV events in wrestling history. Having largely stepped back from professional wrestling in 2020, he retired after WrestleMania 35 in 2019. As an actor, Bautista is known for portraying Drax in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (2014–2023) and Rabban in Dune (2021) and its 2024 sequel. Bautista has additionally starred in Spectre (2015), Blade Runner 2049 (2017), Final Score, Master Z: Ip Man Legacy (both 2018), Army of the Dead (2021), Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (2022), Knock at the Cabin, and Parachute (both 2023). Description above from the Wikipedia article Dave Bautista, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Dave Bautista

Wilson Fisk / Kingpin
for Wilson Fisk / Kingpin in The Daredevil: Man Without Fear (MCU Reboot)
Suggested by kaueoliveira

"The Daredevil: Man Without Fear" is a neo-noir crime thriller that leans heavily into the psychological toll of vigilantism. Matt Murdock is a blind defense attorney in Hell's Kitchen who possesses hypersensitive senses. He is not yet a polished superhero; he is a bruised brawler wearing a makeshift black suit, fueled by Catholic guilt and an addiction to violence. The story focuses on a turf war. The old-school mobs are being swallowed by a mysterious corporate entity led by the reclusive philanthropist Wilson Fisk. Fisk is gentrifying Hell's Kitchen, "saving" the city by destroying its soul. When Matt discovers that his own clients—tenants being evicted and framed—are victims of Fisk's machinations, he takes the fight from the courtroom to the rooftops. The film deconstructs Matt's duality: the lawyer who believes in the system and the devil who believes the system is broken. It culminates in a brutal, visceral confrontation not in a suit of armor, but in a bloody knuckle-brawl in a rain-slicked alley, fighting for the heart of his neighborhood.