Aidan Gillen — Actor (38)
Queer as Folk (1999) [TV] TMDB WikiData IMDb
Queer as Folk
director: Russell T Davies actor: Aidan Gillen / Craig Kelly
Stuart Jones has got it all. He's rich, drop-dead gorgeous and always the centre of attention. He can be forgiven the arrogance because he's pretty close to perfection. His best mate Vince Tyler is funny, adorable and definitely a babe but, unlike his friend, has zero confidence in himself. Since time began, Vince has carried a torch for Stuart but his love remains firmly unrequited. They're both 29, hitting Canal Street every night, stalwarts of the scene but just starting to wonder where else their lives may be going. Then along comes Nathan Maloney. Young, wild and coming out with a vengeance, he crowbars his way into their world and once he arrives, nothing is ever the same again.
Those Who Wish Me Dead (2021) [Movie] IMDb TMDB WikiData NeoDB Douban
Those Who Wish Me Dead
director: Taylor Sheridan actor: Angelina Jolie / Finn Little
other title: Quelli che mi vogliono morto / Aqueles Que Me Desejam a Morte
A young boy finds himself pursued by two assassins in the Montana wilderness, with a survival expert determined to protect him, and a forest fire threatening to consume them all.
London Calling (2025) [Movie] NeoDB IMDb TMDB
London Calling
director: Allan Ungar actor: Josh Duhamel / Aidan Gillen
other title: 倫敦呼叫 / 伦敦呼叫
After fleeing the UK from a job gone wrong, a down on his luck hitman is forced to babysit the son of his new crime boss and show him how to become a man.
Mayor of Kingstown Season 1 (2021) [TV] NeoDB Douban TMDB
Mayor of Kingstown Season 1 part of TV Series: Mayor of Kingstown
director: 本·理查森 / 泰勒·谢里丹 actor: 杰瑞米·雷纳 / 凯尔·钱德勒
크리에이터: 테일러 셰리던, 휴 딜론

출연: 제레미 레너, 다이앤 위스트, 휴 딜론, 토비 밤테파

정의가 사라진 도시, 진정한 주인은 누구인가

민영 교도소 사업의 번성 후, 범죄와 부정부패로 가득 찬 도시 킹스타운의 부패한 권력 브로커이자 막강한 권력을 가진 ‘맥클러스키’ 패밀리의 이야기.
Peaky Blinders Season 5 (2019) [TV] TMDB NeoDB Douban
Peaky Blinders Season 5 part of TV Series: Peaky Blinders
director: 安东尼·拜恩 actor: 基里安·墨菲 / 海伦·麦克洛瑞
It is 1929, Tommy Shelby MP is approached by a charismatic politician with a bold vision for Britain, he realises that his response will affect not just his family’s future but that of the entire nation.
Tapping the Wire (2007) [Movie] TMDB
Tapping the Wire
director: Steven Hore actor: Charlie Brooker / Nick Hornby
Long-time Wire fan Charlie Brooker takes a journey to the mean streets of Baltimore to meet the cast and crew of the series, and undertakes a mission to explain what makes The Wire the best cop show ever made.
Mister John (2013) [Movie] TMDB
Mister John
director: Christine Molloy / Joe Lawlor actor: Aidan Gillen / Zoe Tay
After discovering his wife's infidelities, Gerry leaves London to look after his deceased brother's business and family in Singapore. Discovering a foreign world of opportunity that had not existed before gives Gerry a chance at starting over by slipping into his brother's life - both emotionally and physically. However, leaving his wife and child behind in the UK is not so easy as Gerry must choose between becoming his brother's alter ego 'Mister John' or returning to London to face his failing relationship.
The Wire Odyssey (2007) [Movie] TMDB
The Wire Odyssey
actor: Gbenga Akinnagbe / Reg E. Cathey
A retrospective documentary of the first four seasons of the acclaimed series The Wire.
Game of Thrones - Conquest & Rebellion: An Animated History of the Seven Kingdoms (2017) [Movie] Douban TMDB NeoDB IMDb WikiData
Game of Thrones - Conquest & Rebellion: An Animated History of the Seven Kingdoms
other title: Game of Thrones: Conquista e Ribellione / A Guerra dos Tronos: Conquista e Rebelião
HBO's animated history of Westeros brings to life all the events that shaped the Seven Kingdoms in the thousands of years before Game of Thrones' story begins.
The Wire (2008) [TV] NeoDB
The Wire Season 5
director: 乔·施佩尔 / 厄内斯特·R·迪克森 actor: 多米尼克·韦斯特 / 雷格·E·凯蒂
第五个季节集中在媒体行业。巴尔的摩太阳报面对利润的下滑、记者和新闻的数量减少、新闻质量下降的困境,如何报道被杀流浪者的新闻专题。
第四季结束后的十五个月,市长Carcetti削减警局预算缩减教育赤字迫使案件调查中止。McNulty回到重案组,通过伪造证据制造了流浪者连环杀人案。暗自联系记者,得到社会关注,最终争取到市长支持查案。McNulty 将所得资源分配给警局的侦探使得多个案件取得重大进展……
The Wire (2006) [TV] NeoDB
The Wire Season 4
director: 乔·施佩尔 / 克里斯汀·摩尔 actor: 多米尼克·韦斯特 / 约翰·道曼
第四季将视野拓展到教育系统,其它主要情节还有第三季中引入的市长竞选,并深入描写了Marlo Stanfield领导的贩毒团伙在西巴尔的摩的不断壮大。
The Wire (2004) [TV] NeoDB
The Wire Season 3
director: 艾德·比安奇 / 史蒂夫·希尔 actor: 多米尼克·韦斯特 / 约翰·道曼
第三季的焦点重回到活跃于街头的Barksdale团伙,同时也将视角扩展到政治领域。此外,本季当中引入Hamsterdam这一新支线剧情,以探讨在部分人烟稀少的街区对非法毒品交易及卖淫的「事实性」合法化会有怎么样的潜在积极作用。这种做法在阿姆斯特丹和其他欧洲城市取得了积极成果,减少了市内的街头犯罪。这些都是对早先情节的延续。
Maze Runner: The Death Cure (2018) [Movie] IMDb NeoDB TMDB WikiData Douban
Maze Runner: The Death Cure
director: Wes Ball actor: Dylan O'Brien / Kaya Scodelario
other title: Maze Runner - La rivelazione / Maze Runner: Dødskuren
Thomas leads his group of escaped Gladers on their final and most dangerous mission yet. To save their friends, they must break into the legendary Last City, a WCKD-controlled labyrinth that may turn out to be the deadliest maze of all. Anyone who makes it out alive will get answers to the questions the Gladers have been asking since they first arrived in the maze.
The Lovers (2017) [Movie] TMDB
The Lovers
director: Azazel Jacobs actor: Debra Winger / Tracy Letts
other title: The lovers - Ritrovare l'amore / Os Amantes
The separation of a long married couple goes awry when they fall for each other again.
Ambition (2014) [Movie] Douban
Ambition
director: 托默克·巴金斯基 actor: 艾丹·吉伦 / Aisling Franciosi
other title: 雄心
遥远的未来,一位穿着白色飘逸服装的美丽少女坐在一颗荒凉星球的旷野之上。她举起纤细的手指,试图通过念力控制砂砾,让它们聚集在一起。眼看就要成功之际,沙团突然崩裂,女孩脸上写满了失落。这时,一名形同导师的男人出现,他劝慰女孩不要着急,而女孩仍急于一试。男人不慌不忙地讲述久远以前的事,比如构成生命的最基本元素——水。地球最初的水从何而来?曾经的人们开展了“罗塞塔”计划,他们发生探测器,试图登陆彗星而探究它的元素组成。这是平凡人类的壮志雄心……
本片为欧洲空间局的“罗塞塔计划”成功后拍摄的宣传片。
The Caretaker 2003 Roundabout Theatre Company版 [Performance] Douban
part of Performance: The Caretaker
director: David Jones
other title: 2003 Roundabout Theatre Company版 playwright: Harold Pinter actor: Patrick Stewart / Aidan Gillen
Act I

A night in winter

[Scene 1]

Aston has invited Davies, a homeless man, into his apartment after rescuing him from a bar fight (7–9). Davies comments on the apartment and criticizes the fact that it is cluttered and badly kept. Aston attempts to find a pair of shoes for Davies but Davies rejects all the offers. Once he turns down a pair that doesn’t fit well enough and another that has the wrong colour laces. Early on, Davies reveals to Aston that his real name is not "Bernard Jenkins", his "assumed name", but really "Mac Davies" (19–20, 25). He claims that his papers validating this fact are in Sidcup and that he must and will return there to retrieve them just as soon as he has a good pair of shoes. Aston and Davies discuss where he will sleep and the problem of the "bucket" attached to the ceiling to catch dripping rain water from the leaky roof (20–21) and Davies "gets into bed" while "ASTON sits, poking his [electrical] plug (21).

[Scene 2]
The LIGHTS FADE OUT. Darkness.

LIGHTS UP. Morning. (21) As Aston dresses for the day, Davies awakes with a start, and Aston informs Davies that he was kept up all night by Davies muttering in his sleep. Davies denies that he made any noise and blames the racket on the neighbors, revealing his fear of foreigners: "I tell you what, maybe it were them Blacks" (23). Aston informs Davies that he is going out but invites him to stay if he likes, indicating that he trusts him (23–24), something unexpected by Davies; for, as soon as Aston does leave the room (27), Davies begins rummaging through Aston's "stuff" (27–28) but he is interrupted when Mick, Aston’s brother, unexpectedly arrives, "moves upstage, silently," "slides across the room" and then suddenly "seizes Davies' "arm and forces it up his back," in response to which "DAVIES screams," and they engage in a minutely-choreographed struggle, which Mick wins (28–29), ending Act One with the "Curtain" line, "What's the game?" (29).
Act II

[Scene 1]
A few seconds later

Mick demands to know Davies' name, which the latter gives as "Jenkins" (30), interrogates him about how well he slept the night before (30), wonders whether or not Davies is actually "a foreigner"—to which Davies retorts that he "was" indeed (in Mick's phrase) "Born and bred in the British Isles" (33)—going on to accuse Davies of being "an old robber […] an old skate" who is "stinking the place out" (35), and spinning a verbal web full of banking jargon designed to confuse Davies, while stating, hyperbolically, that his brother Aston is "a number one decorator" (36), either an outright lie or self-deceptive wishful thinking on his part. Just as Mick reaches the climactic line of his diatribe geared to put the old tramp off balance—"Who do you bank with?" (36), Aston enters with a "bag" ostensibly for Davies, and the brothers debate how to fix the leaking roof and Davies interrupts to inject the more practical question: "What do you do . . . when that bucket's full?" (37) and Aston simply says, "Empty it" (37). The three battle over the "bag" that Aston has brought Davies, one of the most comic and often-cited Beckettian routines in the play (38–39). After Mick leaves, and Davies recognises him to be "a real joker, that lad" (40), they discuss Mick's work in "the building trade" and Davies ultimately discloses that the bag they have fought over and that he was so determined to hold on to "ain't my bag" at all (41). Aston offers Davies the job of Caretaker, (42–43), leading to Davies' various assorted animadversions about the dangers that he faces for "going under an assumed name" and possibly being found out by anyone who might "ring the bell called Caretaker" (44).

[Scene 2]

THE LIGHTS FADE TO BLACKOUT.
THEN UP TO DIM LIGHT THROUGH THE WINDOW.
A door bangs.
Sound of a key in the door of the room.
DAVIES enters, closes the door, and tries the light switch, on, off, on, off.

It appears to Davies that "the damn light's gone now," but, it becomes clear that Mick has sneaked back into the room in the dark and removed the bulb; he starts up "the electrolux" and scares Davies almost witless before claiming "I was just doing some spring cleaning" and returning the bulb to its socket (45). After a discussion with Davies about the place being his "responsibility" and his ambitions to fix it up, Mick also offers Davies the job of "caretaker" (46–50), but pushes his luck with Mick when he observes negative things about Aston, like the idea that he "doesn't like work" or is "a bit of a funny bloke" for "Not liking work" (Davies' camouflage of what he really is referring to), leading Mick to observe that Davies is "getting hypocritical" and "too glib" (50), and they turn to the absurd details of "a small financial agreement" relating to Davies' possibly doing "a bit of caretaking" or "looking after the place" for Mick (51), and then back to the inevitable call for "references" and the perpetually-necessary trip to Sidcup to get Davies' identity "papers" (51–52).

[Scene 3]
Morning

Davies wakes up and complains to Aston about how badly he slept. He blames various aspects of the apartment's set up. Aston suggests adjustments but Davies proves to be callous and inflexible. Aston tells the story of how he was checked into a mental hospital and given electric shock therapy, but when he tried to escape from the hospital he was shocked while standing, leaving him with permanent brain damage; he ends by saying, "I've often thought of going back and trying to find the man who did that to me. But I want to do something first. I want to build that shed out in the garden" (54–57). Critics regard Aston's monologue, the longest of the play, as the "climax" of the plot.[3] In dramaturgical terms, what follows is part of the plot's "falling action".
Act III

[Scene 1]
Two weeks later [… ]Afternoon.

Davies and Mick discuss the apartment. Mick relates "(ruminatively)" in great detail what he would do to redecorate it (60). When asked who "would live there," Mick's response "My brother and me" leads Davies to complain about Aston's inability to be social and just about every other aspect of Aston's behaviour (61–63). Though initially invited to be a "caretaker," first by Aston and then by Mick, he begins to ingratiate himself with Mick, who acts as if he were an unwitting accomplice in Davies' eventual conspiracy to take over and fix up the apartment without Aston's involvement (64) an outright betrayal of the brother who actually took him in and attempted to find his "belongings"; but just then Aston enters and gives Davies yet another pair of shoes which he grudgingly accepts, speaking of "going down to Sidcup" in order "to get" his "papers" again (65–66).

[Scene 2]
That night

Davies brings up his plan when talking to Aston, whom he insults by throwing back in his face the details of his treatment in the mental institution (66–67), leading Aston, in a vast understatement, to respond: "I . . . I think it's about time you found somewhere else. I don't think we're hitting it off" (68). When finally threatened by Davies pointing a knife at him, Aston tells Davies to leave: "Get your stuff" (69). Davies, outraged, claims that Mick will take his side and kick Aston out instead and leaves in a fury, concluding (mistakenly): "Now I know who I can trust" (69).

[Scene 3]
Later

Davies reenters with Mick explaining the fight that occurred earlier and complaining still more bitterly about Mick's brother, Aston (70–71). Eventually, Mick takes Aston's side, beginning with the observation "You get a bit out of your depth sometimes, don't you?" (71). Mick forces Davies to disclose that his "real name" is Davies and his "assumed name" is "Jenkins" and, after Davies calls Aston "nutty", Mick appears to take offense at what he terms Davies' "impertinent thing to say," concludes, "I'm compelled to pay you off for your caretaking work. Here's half a dollar," and stresses his need to turn back to his own "business" affairs (74). When Aston comes back into the apartment, the brothers face each other," "They look at each other. Both are smiling, faintly" (75). Using the excuse of having returned for his "pipe" (given to him earlier through the generosity of Aston), Davies turns to beg Aston to let him stay (75–77). But Aston rebuffs each of Davies' rationalisations of his past complaints (75–76). The play ends with a "Long silence" as Aston, who "remains still, his back to him [Davies], at the window, apparently unrelenting as he gazes at his garden and makes no response at all to Davies' futile plea, which is sprinkled with many dots (". . .") of elliptical hesitations (77–78).