Successful actors with non-standard appearance (40 photos). Personal life of Eddie Redmayne Eddie Redmayne loves scripts with color in the title

In 2012, the world learned about the handsome Eddie Redmayne - thanks to the film “Les Miserables” for this. Three years later, the actor received an Oscar as “Best Actor” for his brilliant performance in “The Universe of Stephen Hawking.” And finally, in 2016, Eddie joined another Universe and became Newt Scamander!

But this, imagine, is not the most interesting! There are many much more interesting facts in Redmayne's biography!

1. Redmayne was Prince William's classmate

The Duke of Cambridge and the future Newt studied together at Eton College. What memories does Eddie have?

“He's a wonderful person. I always felt a little sorry for him because everyone wanted to fight the future king of England."

Wait, that's not all. At the same time, William's younger brother Prince Harry and Tom Hiddleston were studying at college. We can’t even imagine who to envy more:)

2. Eddie is colorblind (almost)

“There was a wonderful production director Nina Gold. I played the scene 7 times and then she asked, “Do you have anything else, Eddie?” To which I replied: “Okay, this childhood dream is crushed.”

9. Eddie wanted to play Voldemort

Redmayne has long wanted to get into the world of magic and wizardry in the Potter series. And I tried to join the cast when they weren’t even thinking about any “Fantastic Beasts”.

Eddie Redmayne is not a sex symbol. His portraits are not hung on the walls of teenage girls. He is not given the roles of macho and heroic handsome men. Charismatic, charming characters are also not his role. And in general, as a child they forgot to tell him that ugly, freckled guys, who also suffer from color blindness, have no chance of success in show business. However, at 33 years old, he already has an Oscar, a Golden Globe and a BAFTA Award for Best Actor. Why? Simply because he is one of the greatest actors of our time.

And even Eddie’s parents, when he received an Oscar, were not at a loss and immediately began renting out their villa on the French coast for 4,500 pounds per night, indicating that the best days of the childhood of the great British actor Eddie Redmayne were spent there. They say there is no end to those interested.

Eddie said his childhood was insanely privileged. It is enough to note that he went to school with Prince William, with whom they played rugby on the same team. At the same time, Eddie began attending acting classes and performing in amateur performances. After school, he started studying at Eton, but very soon lost interest in it and decided to enroll in drama school. But then his parents intervened and persuaded him to get a classical education at Trinity College (Cambridge).

While at Eton, Eddie first met his future wife Hannah Bagshawe, but then there was no hint of love in their relationship. In addition, he soon transferred to Cambridge, and she went to Edinburgh to study journalism. The next time they met was only ten years later.

Relationship with Tara Hacking

While at Trinity College, Eddie began dating his childhood friend, Tara Hacking. Their relationship lasted more than eight years. She was there when Eddie, almost by accident, got into a theatrical production of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night.

Tara supported Eddie as he took his first hesitant steps towards the pinnacle of fame. But in their way stood the eternal problems of all famous actors - endless separations. The filming schedule forced Eddie to spend six months in a row in America, while Tara remained in England. To maintain the relationship, she also tried to become an actress and even starred in the film “V for Vendetta” in a minor role. But participation in different projects alienated them even further from each other, and eventually the couple broke up.

Eddie Redmayne and Hannah Bagshawe (Hannah Backshave)

The actor did not stay alone for long: in 2012, at a charity evening, he again met Hannah Bagshawe, who in ten years managed to become a famous journalist. Their relationship quickly turned from a light romance into something more serious. In 2013, Eddie admitted that Hannah helps him pick out outfits because he is colorblind. Well, in June 2014, in the Times newspaper, according to the old English tradition, a message appeared that Eddie Redmayne was asking Hannah’s father for his daughter’s hand in marriage. Apparently, the father did not refuse, because after 5 months the lovers got married.

Curious: Photo of Monica Bellucci without makeup

Eddie Redmayne has become increasingly famous and famous lately. And most recently, he received his first Oscar for his participation in the film “The Theory of Everything,” where he played the role of the outstanding scientist Stephen Hawking. Taking all this into account, we decided to tell you some interesting facts about his life that not every fan of his probably knows.

1. Edward John David Redmayne was born on January 6, 1982 to Patricia Burke and Richard Redmayne. His great-grandfather was also named Richard, or rather Sir Richard Redmayne. His grandfather received a knighthood for his contribution to mine safety during the First World War, and became England's first Inspector General of Mines.

2. Despite the fact that he appears to be a very simple and sociable person, in reality Redmayne could act pompous and pretentious, because he is a graduate of Eton (one of the most prestigious colleges in England). Not only that, but his classmates included none other than Prince William himself - both were good friends during their studies.

3. At the auditions for Les Misérables, Redmayne told director Tom Hooper that he could ride a horse, but he had only actually ridden once in his life. And when it came to filming, the horse got out of his control, and Redmayne almost killed about 40 people in the crowd, which forced Hooper to grab a megaphone and call the actor “the king of liars” in front of everyone. After that, he had to actually learn to ride a horse, taking a course at a special school.

However, the story about horses does not end there. Tom Hooper was angry at Redmayne for lying about his skills and, specifically to mock him, wrote a scene where Marius (played by Eddie in Les Misérables) had to gallop down the street. By the way, Redmayne successfully completed this task.

4. Freckles can be confidently called a very unattractive feature of appearance (and many will agree with this), but they did not become an obstacle in the development of Eddie’s career. Being the official face of the Burberry brand, the freckled-faced guy, thanks to his extraordinary appearance, received a role in the acclaimed film “Savage Grace” in 2007. Oscar nominee Julianne Moore instantly recognized him as perfect for the role of her son as soon as she saw him in the audition room.

5. Despite showcasing his impressive vocal abilities in Les Misérables, Eddie admitted that he was often told to shut up when he tried to sing karaoke songs.

6. Unfortunately for many ladies, Eddie is now a married man. On December 15, 2014, Eddie Redmayne married his longtime girlfriend Hannah Backshave. Their love story is very interesting. It all started when Eton students decided to organize a charity fashion show at a local school for girls. “I had to walk on stage topless. At that time I was a pale, freckled guy, and when I walked onto the podium, few people paid attention to me, but the most beautiful boys in school followed me and all the girls in the audience started shouting their approval, which was very memorable,” says Redmayne .

The only girl who paid attention to him then was Hannah. Interestingly, their first date took place in Florence - just before Eddie began working on Les Misérables.

7. It has been widely reported in the press that Redmayne suffers from color blindness, and this is partly true. He can't tell the difference between red and green, which forces his wife Hannah to help him pick out his clothes. He also starred as an artist's assistant in a Broadway play called "Red" and also paints in real life. It is also known that his favorite color is called "International Klein Blue", better known as International Klein Blue.

8. One of Eddie Redmayne's earliest awards is the Evening Standard Theater Award, which his parents received because he was busy. It was presented by Sex and the City star Kim Cattrall (who played the role of Samantha). It was this event that proved to his parents that he was not mistaken in his choice of profession.

9. Eddie realized he had achieved celebrity status after he fell asleep on a plane and the man sitting next to him then asked him if he was some important person because all the flight attendants were looking at him while he slept.

10. With the transition to a boys' school, Eddie began to play only female roles on stage. His Viola in Twelfth Night (a role in which he was supposed to play a woman dressed as a man) bears an uncanny resemblance to Jennifer Garner. When Conan O'Brien pointed this out to Eddie, he called it the greatest compliment he had ever received.

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PSYCHOLOGIES №8

Eddie Redmayne: 'I'm afraid of becoming a crazy dad'

He played his first role at 12. He became famous at 20. He received an Oscar at 32. He never experienced failure. I never quarreled with my parents. Happily married. He is a fashion icon and the "best-dressed Brit of the year." Classmate of Prince William. Eddie Redmayne played a transgender man in the film The Danish Girl and a genius in the film The Universe of Stephen Hawking. What is he like, this darling of fate?

PHOTO Getty Images

A serious person, he speaks confidently, asserts categorically, he invariably has his own opinion, and it is quite competent. But he has so many freckles that it seems that they are about to not withstand the crowd and crumble onto the floor of the secret interview room in the building of the former Mussolini-era casino, which houses the press center of the Venice Festival. I imagine how freckles roll off the tip of his nose... And I smile completely inappropriately. He breaks off. But suddenly he himself smiles:

“You are just like my wife. She laughs when I answer her questions seriously. But she asks such questions that the answer is only possible in the form of a lecture!”

Yes, Eddie Redmayne gave me a lecture about the importance of equal rights for transgender people - he is passionate about this issue and therefore considers his role in “The Danish Girl” about the first known transgender person, Lili Elbe, not so much cinematic as human rights. He seriously says that life constantly tests the humanity of society and each of us - by the need to take into account first the rights of women, then representatives of other races, then sexual minorities, now people who have changed their gender.

He talks about how director Lana Wachowski, who herself recently “lived in the body of a man,” helped him in working on the role.

He talks with bitterness about the fate of American Vicki Thompson, who committed suicide after she was sentenced to serve time in a men's prison in accordance with passport formalities... Redmayne is a man of his generation and his environment - he is keenly interested in the dramas of the world, since his own fate and his surroundings seem too prosperous and blandly peaceful to him.

He says: “Why are you asking about me? There is only boredom - I was born, played, got married... Everything interesting is just around!” So I promise him to request another meeting with his agent. And then get him to talk. He doubts that I will succeed - because there is nothing special about him... But when we meet almost a year later in London, in a cafe in Bermondsey (he has an apartment here, he grew up nearby, in Chelsea, and a native Chelsea man is out of the center of life I can’t imagine), I don’t have to try very hard. He is now in the mood to talk. And specifically about myself. Because it turned out that there was “additional meaning” in his life. More precisely, it is about to appear.

I have never looked forward to meeting any woman as eagerly as I did with her! I'm already in love with her! You know, I'm afraid of becoming a crazy father. Who will terrorize his daughter with his care. But everything speaks in favor of this version. With her birth, everything, absolutely everything will change! (Iris Mary, daughter of Redmayne and his wife Hannah, was born in June, shortly after we met. - Author's note.)

Psychologies:

What exactly will change? Your life is already basically set - you have a career. There is an Oscar for Stephen Hawking's Universe. There is a Golden Globe, there is a British Academy Film Prize. There are theater prizes - the Tony and the Laurence Olivier Prize. Already have a name. What can she change? It can decorate, complement. But change?..

E.R.:

I think she will change me. She will become the center. For her I will bear - well, at least for a while - parental responsibility. All my current responsibilities are professional and social. And then there will be responsibility imparted by nature itself... I have a need for such responsibility. And I will become less scared.

To you? Scary?

E.R.:

Yeah. I'm afraid. I get nervous before and during filming. I'm shaking. Until recently, I could cry if I was harshly criticized in a review. It's not that I'm such a perfectionist. And it’s not that I deify success that much. But I'm afraid, really. I'm afraid not to do it so well that I myself think: this is definitely good. Because in a movie you only have a few hours to do it “well.” And you won’t be able to fix anything later.

This is what I fear most. Perhaps it's because I don't have professional acting training and the natural defense mechanisms that come with it. I am an art critic and actually came into the profession from amateur theater.

But you can’t say that you are afraid of something. On the contrary, you look and act like a confident person. You were not afraid to go on stage, having only a children's theater and a university theater behind you. And immediately in the leading role, and a female one at that...

E.R.:

There is no courage here! Has this ever happened to you - the feeling that everything is going according to a certain scenario - from beginning to end? Do you think I don’t know that I’ve been lucky and continue to be lucky? I am fully aware that this is so. At first I played in the children's theater - it was just a hobby, and then in Cambridge in the student theater. But we had an amazing director, actor and director Simon Dormandy.

I was twenty... 2002. I myself was probably quite touching. Yes, and scared. I was scared by this luck - I’m studying at Cambridge, I have absolutely no intention of becoming an actor, I’m just playing in a student theater, and here the head of the Shakespeare troupe himself, the god of the British theater Rylance, takes me to one of the main roles... Some kind of incredible luck! In my life, as you understand, I haven’t had to work particularly hard - I come from a wealthy family, life has always provided me with many opportunities.

“I haven’t had to work particularly hard in my life - I come from a wealthy family, life has always provided me with many opportunities”

Then I believed that I had already made the main bold act in my life - I decided to become a specialist in painting. By painting. I'm colorblind! And my first-year supervisor strongly recommended antiquity to me, which is understandable: there are only forms, and practically no colors. But I was passionate about the art of ideas. Not techniques - colors, manners - but ideas.

And he was in love with the works of Yves Klein. This is an art that voluntarily limits itself in order to speak more clearly, more sharply. I liked the voluntary nature of self-restraint... In a word, it was already brave to enroll in art history with color blindness. I didn’t imagine any further courage in myself. And in general I don’t have it in me.

But you are not afraid to play the transgender Lili Elbe, a man who has realized that he is a woman, and Stephen Hawking, a man without a man’s body and appearance... Isn’t this brave for a modern actor, who, as a rule, is forced to nurture a glossy masculinity? And you’re also a model, you participated in Burberry campaigns...

E.R.:

Dividing people on any basis is completely unproductive, in my opinion. To nurture something artificial in yourself for the sake of social success... This is even the stupidest of goals.

It's good for you to say...

E.R.:

I know what I'm talking about! You need to strive for what you call happiness alone with yourself. For me it's about living life to the fullest, feeling a lot and talking about people who changed the world for the better. Someone - by the very fact of their existence. Someone - with a heroic impulse. I really have nothing more to say about this.

“The main courageous act in my life was that I decided to become a painting specialist. But I’m colorblind”

I don't think it's shameful to show weakness. I do not believe that being one gender or the other imposes obligations. I believe that everything in the world is a matter of our choice. I don’t care what people think who strive to turn reality into a metro timetable - where everything is on the clock and everything moves exclusively on its own rails. I don't move on rails.

How do you move?

E.R.:

Well, as you can see, I’m not giving up the broom either. It makes it easier to cross borders.

I know that you graduated from Eton, a boarding school for boys. An aristocratic establishment, super prestigious. But it is known that these schools are discipline, pressure on academic performance and instilling a sense of teamwork, dormitories and oatmeal...

E.R.:

You have a somewhat literary image of a closed British school. I would say Dickensian. And my Eton was joyful. You go there at the age of 13, leave at 18. You spend the time there when your personality and values ​​are formed. And next to you are the same 13-year-olds. It doesn’t matter that, say, Prince William studies with you - he’s just my classmate.

It is important that here you are all equal and all together. And you experience one thing. The main thing at Eton is friendship. Those friendships that are made in private schools last a lifetime. Because these friendships shape us. All my closest friends are from Eton. Not from the university, not from the theater - from school. Nowhere, never and with anyone will I experience this feeling of shared destiny. And this is a very happy feeling.

Your parents, who cared so much about your education - Eton, then Trinity College, Cambridge - were not surprised when they realized that you would become an actor?

E.R.:

You know, my first childhood memory is this: I’m sitting in a stroller, the rain is pouring like buckets, there’s a plastic canopy above me, and from under it I see my mother, whose umbrella has been twisted by the wind. Soaked to the skin. And I feel warm and comfortable, despite the rain. I have a feeling of complete security with my parents. And to this day I feel under their protection - not even needing it anymore, but, on the contrary, hoping to be their support.

“Housing in London is crazy expensive! That’s why now I… pay for a couple of apartments where young actors live.”

And when acting appeared on the horizon, dad (a financier, a man from the City, always dealing with numbers) was still surprised: why choose such a competitive field of activity? And he conscientiously presented me with statistics - what percentage of actors are employed in the profession. Insignificant, of course. And my mother always helped me - she advised me to go to the children's theater. Although she herself treats art with respect from the viewer, at a distance...

But, in general, this is all quite strange - I have three brothers and a sister. Everyone in the City has reached heights, made a career, some are even CEO... I really am a black sheep. After university I wanted to work as an actor, but it didn’t work out very well - I worked in pubs, as a bartender, as a waiter - in general, I drank my dad’s statistics in practice. And dad never said “I told you so!” Although I lived with my parents - I returned to them from Cambridge, I could not rent an apartment. It was also luck that my parents were in London. Housing in London is crazy expensive! That's why now I... well, pay for a couple of apartments where young actors live.

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, David Yates' Harry Potter prequel, will be released in November. Eddie Redmayne played the main role - the writer Newt Scamander, who experienced extraordinary adventures in a secret society of wizards 70 years before Harry read his book at Hogwarts.

Documentary research film “The Art of War with Eddie Redmayne.” Here the actor acts as a narrator, a researcher of the phenomenon of wars in painting - from the First World War to the Iraq War.

Not all actors have an appearance that meets generally accepted standards of beauty, however, this has not stopped them from achieving fame and winning the sympathy of a huge number of fans. We will get acquainted with 20 actors with non-standard appearance further.

Benedict Cumberbatch

Benedict Cumberbatch, Laurence Olivier and Emmy Award winner, Golden Globe and Oscar nominee, like any Englishman, is not without self-irony. "God gave me a strange face - something between an otter's face and something that people find vaguely attractive," he says. "Cumberbatch - sounds like someone passed gas in the bathroom!" - continues the main Sherlock Holmes of our time. A sharp mind, a sense of humor and talent - and not a single rating of the sexiest actors can do without Cumberbatch. And Time magazine generally lists him as one of the hundred most influential people. "Otter face"? Benedict, women and the press you hate so much do not agree with you!

Marty Feldman

Two-time BAFTA Award winner Marty Feldman was not just an outstanding comedian, but also a successful screenwriter and director. He gained fame as the leading man in the 1960s TV series Marty. He also starred in Young Frankenstein, Silent Movie and the Monty Python sketch series How to Annoy People. Feldman's bulging eyes are the result of an overactive thyroid gland, and the strange shape of his nose is a consequence of boxing matches in his youth. “Money can’t buy poverty,” Feldman said. Like talent, we add - it’s banal, but it’s true, and Marty Feldman only confirms this truth.


Eddie Redmayne

The appearance of Eddie Redmayne, an Englishman with an admixture of Irish and Scottish blood, is rather close to the catwalk than to Hollywood standards. Fashion house executives love these androgynous guys. And Eddie is hard to miss with his red hair and freckled skin. It is not surprising that he was the face of Burberry, and fashion magazines, interrupting each other, praised Redmayne for his excellent taste in clothes. But we love him, of course, not for this. Are there many such models? But there is only one such actor. Who else could play Stephen Hawking in such a way that Hawking himself would praise him? And to receive three major awards for this at once - an Oscar, a Golden Globe, and a BAFTA?

Vincent Cassel

Vincent Cassel, like everyone else in our ranking, is not very similar to Apollo. More like the satyr Marsyas, who, to his misfortune, won against Apollo in a musical competition, for which he was left without skin. There is something demonic about Kassel. Negative charisma attracts both women who are crazy about the Frenchman, and Hollywood producers who, as Cassel himself puts it, always offer him roles of scum. “But I take revenge on them: I make my scum cooler than their heroes,” Cassel gloats.

Daniel Craig

Now it’s hard to even imagine how much fuss there was when Daniel Craig was cast as James Bond. Bond fans, without restraining themselves, spilled venom on the Internet, criticizing both Craig's acting and, of course, his appearance. He was reproached for his hair color (the first blond agent 007!), his drunken face (well, he looks like a drunk), his resemblance to Vladimir Putin, and even his lack of masculinity! But Craig put his spiteful critics to shame by becoming the highest-grossing and highest-paid James Bond.

Danny Trejo

Danny Trejo, who became widely known thanks to Robert Rodriguez, who directed him in the films From Dusk Till Dawn, Spy Kids and Machete, mainly plays the roles of evil Mexicans and Indians. Mustaches, tattoos, long hair and a gloomy look from under their brows - the villains turn out to be convincing. By Trejo’s own admission, he got into cinema quite by accident - trying to get off drugs. And in childhood and adolescence he engaged in petty crimes. Now Trejo, smiling radiantly, says that with his roles he demonstrates to fragile minds how quickly a crooked path leads criminals to prison or a cemetery.

Adrien Brody

Long-nosed, long-legged, big-armed, with dog-like sad eyes, Adrien Brody, if he were a woman, would probably suffer from vicious sexist jokes. And if he had lived in Ancient Rome, the poet Catullus would have dedicated his poem “The Village Beauty” to him. But Brody was lucky to be born in our tolerant age. And as a man, the age is still sexist. Women want to woo him, directors reward him with roles, and Brody, with a sad look, shovels all kinds of awards. His most famous films: “The Pianist”, “The Secret Forest”, “King Kong”.

Michael Berryman

Michael Berryman's unusual appearance is the result of a genetic disease - hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia, which can leave a person without hair, nails and teeth. A large forehead, sunken cheeks and wrinkled skin are also symptoms of this rare disease, which determined Berryman’s creative role. During his long career, he managed to star in almost a hundred films, playing mutants, monsters, monsters and other terrifying characters. Michael Berryman is best known for his roles in the cult film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and the Star Trek series.

Adriano Celentano

It’s probably enough to say that Adriano Celentano’s most famous film, besides, of course, “The Taming of the Shrew,” was “Bingo Bongo,” in which the Italian actor portrayed the ape man with amazing conviction. This role became one of the most unusual in Celentano's career, since throughout the entire film he does not speak, but growls with inarticulate sounds. The result? The spectators' hearts were shattered. This is animal sexuality - more important than a glossy appearance.

Danny DeVito

The path to Danny DeVito's acting career was winding: he burst into big cinema straight from a hairdressing salon. Catholic father DeVito, who himself worked as a barber, caused a huge scandal for his son when he mentioned that he was going to become an artist. My father (probably rightly) believed that a man 152 cm tall was unlikely to conquer the Hollywood hills. As a result, Danny DeVito trained as a makeup artist, but his acting career overtook him. In the United States, DeVito gained enormous fame playing taxi dispatcher Louis De Palma in the TV series Taxi. For this role he received both an Oscar and a Golden Globe. And worldwide fame came to him after the film “Romancing the Stone,” in which he played a short gangster.

Willem Dafoe

Dafoe admits that he likes to play outsiders with an unusual destiny. And the demonic appearance only helps here. It is perhaps difficult to find a better performer of the roles of sociopaths and outcasts. Willem Dafoe, like no one else, is known for his “villainous” roles: he played a Martian, a strip club owner, a thief in law, an FSB agent, and the Green Goblin, finally! But the most surprising thing is that his roles as non-villains are no less convincing - at least his work in “The Last Temptation of Christ” and “The English Patient” is worth it.

Steve Buscemi

Steve Buscemi looks like he's been beat up by life, not like an actor of the first magnitude. Despite his acting talent, he often plays episodic and supporting roles on wide screens. The eccentric Buscemi is also known for his portrayals of killers, bandits and other criminal characters. For example, he played Mr. Pink in Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, the maniac Garland Green in West's Con Air and a petty crook in the Coen brothers' Fargo.

Christopher Walken

“Morning is the best time to watch movies,” says Christopher Walken. We think this is true, especially when it comes to films in which Walken portrays Evil, because at night the heart of impressionable people can stop. And Walken can scare you with just one look, he doesn’t need makeup. For this reason, he always gets criminal and mystical roles. “You don’t have to do anything to me to make me look sinister,” admits the actor. And even the “famous before him” hairstyle, which on others would look simply comical, looks creepy on Walken.

John Malkovich

John Malkovich is another actor on our list with a face that could belong to a serial killer or psychopath. It is not surprising that he also often gets the roles of people whom you don’t want to meet in a dark alley. “I am attracted to inhuman characters. People try to find reasons for cruel and sadistic behavior, but I think it's all just a lack of humanity and caring for others. I think I'm good at playing these characters because I just don't like them. They are very attractive to the audience, but I hate them. It's quite strange,” says Malkovich.

Jack Black

"Don't underestimate the power of eyebrows!" - Jack Black insists. And indeed, it is difficult to surpass him in the ability to raise an eyebrow correctly. It’s hard not to envy such talent, as well as such thick hair and beard. Eyebrows, beard, hair - most men seem to have all this on their faces, but only Jack Black looks like Chewbacca, who has dyed his hair brunette.

Gerard Depardieu

"Belgium - can it take all the world's cholesterol?" - this inscription appeared next to the image of Gerard Depardieu in the scandalous French magazine Charlie Hebdoe after the actor, dissatisfied with the tax cases brought against him, decided to change his citizenship and moved to Belgium. And you still think that our text is evil? Everyone and everyone made fun of Depardieu’s appearance (especially his eggplant nose). This did not stop the star of Waltzing from acting with the best directors (in total he starred in several hundred films) and dating beauties (Depardieu claims that, in addition to his four official children, he has 20 more illegitimate children from ten mistresses).

Ron Perlman

Ron Perlman, who became famous for his role as the “hero from hell” Hellboy, looks a little apocalyptic himself. It seems that after the nuclear winter, when the radioactive ash cools down a little, such determined men with batons will emerge from the ground and rebuild the world with their powerful hands. From this point of view, it is only natural that Perlman is the voice of the narrator in the Fallout series of post-apocalyptic games.

Rowan Atkinson

Rowan Atkinson has the amazing ability to turn his face into a animated caricature with the snap of a finger. This is probably one of the secrets of the wild popularity of the Mister Bean series. Atkinson's hero sticks out his ears, widens his eyes and moves his nose, like a bloodhound sniffing at a scent. Agree, not every actor can make the audience laugh until they have liver colic with just one movement of their facial muscles.

John Travolta

The star of “Grease” and “Pulp Fiction” John Travolta can hardly be called handsome - his unusual appearance was given to him by his Italian father and Irish mother. Travolta could hardly play airy and sophisticated creatures, such as vampires glowing in the sun. “I’m just not a vampire,” this is how he explained Tarantino’s reluctance to star in the film From Dusk Till Dawn. But he looks great in the role of bandits, corrupt CIA agents, terrorists and brutal dancers from the outskirts.

Benicio Del Toro

His bright Puerto Rican appearance and sad eyes that remain sad even when Benicio del Toro frowns or laughs brought him many roles in crime thrillers and dramas. Movies about drugs, sex and rock 'n' roll may seem corny, but del Toro's dark and moody presence alone takes them to the next level.