
Age: 58
male
Mark Alan Ruffalo (born November 22, 1967) is an American actor. He began acting in the late 1980s and first gained recognition for his work in Kenneth Lonergan's play This Is Our Youth (1996) and drama film You Can Count on Me (2000). He went on to star in the romantic comedies 13 Going on 30 (2004) and Just like Heaven (2005), and the thrillers In the Cut (2003), Zodiac (2007), and Shutter Island (2010). He received a Tony Award nomination for his supporting role in the Broadway revival of Awake and Sing! in 2006. Ruffalo has gained international recognition for playing Bruce Banner / Hulk in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, beginning with the film The Avengers (2012). Ruffalo earned a record-tying four nominations for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for playing a sperm donor in The Kids Are All Right (2010), Dave Schultz in Foxcatcher (2014), Michael Rezendes in Spotlight (2015), and a debauched lawyer in Poor Things (2023). He won a Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actor for playing a gay activist in the television drama film The Normal Heart (2015), and a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor for his dual role as identical twins in the miniseries I Know This Much Is True (2020).

Mark Ruffalo

Detective. Emil Tupolski
for Detective. Emil Tupolski in The Pillowman
Suggested by miniver

In a bleak interrogation room, a writer named Katurian is pulled into a nightmare he never imagined. Known for his disturbing short stories—tales filled with violence, damaged childhoods, and unsettling imagination—he now finds himself questioned by the police when a series of child murders eerily resemble scenes from his fiction. As the hours pass, two contrasting officers, Tupolski and Ariel, press him for answers. Their methods clash, their tempers shift, and every story Katurian has ever written suddenly becomes potential evidence. The pressure intensifies when they reveal that his vulnerable brother, Michal, may be connected to the crimes in ways Katurian never expected. Reality and imagination start to blur. Katurian’s own stories echo hauntingly through the investigation, forcing him to confront what it means to create dark art in a world already full of darkness. Is a writer responsible for the shadows he puts on the page? Do stories shape people, or do people shape stories? And how much pain must an artist endure to tell the truth? As the night spirals deeper, Katurian and Michal face choices that cut to the bone—choices about loyalty, creation, guilt, and the cost of telling stories that refuse to be silenced. A tense psychological drama wrapped inside a writer’s worst fears, The Pillowman explores the fragile line between fiction and reality… and the dangerous places where they collide.
