
Age: 58
male
Josh James Brolin (born February 12, 1968) is an American actor. A son of actor James Brolin, he gained fame in his youth for his role in the adventure film The Goonies (1985). After years of decline, Brolin had a resurgence with his starring role in the crime film No Country for Old Men (2007). Brolin received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for portraying Dan White in the biopic Milk (2008). Brolin's career progressed with roles in W. (2008), True Grit (2010), Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010), Men in Black 3 (2012), Oldboy (2013), Inherent Vice (2014), Everest (2015), and Hail, Caesar! (2016). He gained wider recognition for playing Thanos in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), including in the films Avengers: Infinity War (2018) and Avengers: Endgame (2019), as well as Cable in Deadpool 2 (2018). Brolin also collaborated with filmmaker Denis Villeneuve in the action thriller Sicario (2015) and in the science fiction films Dune (2021) and Dune: Part Two (2024), in which he played Gurney Halleck.

Josh Brolin

Bruce Wayne
for Bruce Wayne in The Dark Knight Returns
Suggested by andrewmmovies

There's a few routes we can take this, Cristopher Nolan Batman 4 or a completely seperate Batman characterisation. I think it would be a brilliant title for a Batman 4, but sticking true to the comics, I feel it would be wrong to recast the Joker following Heath Ledgers death, and would introducing a Superman character work? Two-face is also dead in the Dark Knight Trilogy so three of the key villains to this story would be missing. There are no real replacements to these characters as most of the Dark Knight villains are dead. So I've chosen to go with a comic-book accurate, seperate adaption of the character. I will leave certain castings to you, perhaps you may decide a fourth Nolan film is best, perhaps you may decide Ben Afflect would be the best choice for Batman, and Henry Caville the best choice for Superman, but choose as you want! In a dystopian near-future Gotham City, an aging Bruce Wayne emerges from a decade of retirement to reclaim his identity as Batman. The Dark Knight returns to combat a surge of gang violence and urban decay, facing new threats including the mutant leader of a brutal street gang and a government-sponsored Superman sent to stop him. As Batman's brutal methods clash with modern politics and media manipulation, he must confront not only physical enemies but the moral ambiguity of his crusade. The story explores themes of aging, legacy, and whether Batman's violent vigilantism can ever truly save a corrupt city. Told through a noir-tinged narrative with comic panels, news broadcasts, and internal monologue, this dark meditation on heroism and power examines what it means to be a symbol in a world that has moved on. Batman's return forces Gotham—and the world—to reckon with the consequences of his existence.