
Age: 36
male
Daniel Jacob Radcliffe (born July 23, 1989) is an English actor. He rose to fame at age twelve, when he began portraying Harry Potter in the film series of the same name; and has held various other film and theatre roles. Over his career, Radcliffe has received various awards and nominations. Radcliffe made his acting debut at age 10 in the BBC One television film David Copperfield (1999), followed by his feature film debut in The Tailor of Panama (2001). The same year, he starred as Harry Potter in the film adaptation of the J.K. Rowling fantasy novel, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone. Over the next decade, he played the eponymous role in seven sequels, culminating with Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 (2011). During this period, he became one of the world's highest-paid actors and gained worldwide fame, popularity, and critical acclaim. Following the success of Harry Potter, Radcliffe starred in the romantic comedy What If? (2013), and played the lawyer Arthur Kipps in the horror film The Woman in Black (2012), poet Allen Ginsberg in the drama film Kill Your Darlings (2013), Igor in the science-fiction horror film Victor Frankenstein (2015), a sentient corpse in the comedy-drama film Swiss Army Man (2016), technological prodigy Walter Mabry in the heist thriller film Now You See Me 2 (2016), and FBI agent Nate Foster in the critically acclaimed thriller film Imperium (2016). Since 2019, he has starred in the TBS anthology series Miracle Workers. In 2022, he starred in the action comedy The Lost City and portrayed Weird Al Yankovic in Weird: The Al Yankovic Story. Radcliffe branched out to stage acting in 2007, starring in the West End and Broadway productions of Equus. From 2011 to 2012 he portrayed J. Pierrepont Finch in the Broadway revival of the musical How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. He continued in Martin McDonagh's dark comedy The Cripple of Inishmaan (2013-2014) in the West End and Broadway and a revival of Tom Stoppard's play Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (2017) at The Old Vic. He also starred in the satirical plays Privacy (2016) and The Lifespan of a Fact (2018), respectively off and on Broadway. In 2022 starred in the New York Theatre Workshop revival of Stephen Sondheim's Merrily We Roll Along.

When Eric Lensherr starts to use his team to destroy famous landmarks such as the Empire State Building. Charles Xavier and his mutants try to stop them, but they fail, and Charles is left paralyzed from the waist down. Meanwhile Logan and Eric start arguing about whether or not it's right to be doing this. Logan expresses that he wants equality, and he joined the team because of that but teams and originations like this don't want equality they want superiority. He tells Eric that all mutants ever wanted was acceptance and that being what humans think they are, isn't going to get them that. So, with all that Logan leaves and talks to Charles Xavier. Meanwhile Colossus is struggling with what he should do, he knows that what he is doing is wrong. General Ross hears Colossus talking about it and decides to let Colossus go. He tells Colossus to run and hide but Colossus instead tries to be a hero which ends up getting him attacked by Eric and his mutants, but Charles and his team save Colossus and fight Eric's team. The movie ends with a fight between Charle's team and Eric's team where Eric's team wins again. Scott ends up going out into the battlefield alone and tells Eric's team that they don't have to be Eric's puppets and that Eric only tells them these things about acceptance and free will to get them to do what he says. Rouge looks at her team and realizes she's on the wrong side and so she grabs Eric's arm, takes his powers, and traps them all under a bunch of trucks.

