"Malcolm Ware aka Mal Ware"

seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Egypt
seen from Brazil
seen from China

seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from Sweden
seen from Egypt
seen from Egypt
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany
seen from Germany
seen from Yemen
seen from Yemen

seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from Norway
"Malcolm Ware aka Mal Ware"
My best attempt to describe the top action movie stars and what makes their movies distinct from each other:
Arnold Schwarzenegger is the really, really strong guy who says dumb catchphrases
Sylvester Stallone is the troubled underdog hero with a really deep, distinct voice
Michael Biehn is the average joe (he’s like the Hawkeye of action movie stars)
Jackie Chan is a silly goody two shoes who is really, really good at martial arts (but the fun type, not the gritty urban combat stuff we see in more modern movies)
Jet Li also does martial arts, but he’s the more serious, brooding type of hero
Jean Claude Van Damme has to do some crazy gymnastics shit in his movies, regardless of who he is playing (ex: he’s played a serial killer and an army captain, two very different characters who are somehow proficient in gymnastics)
Keanu Reeves has to be the stoic badass who acts more through his facial expressions than dialogue
Jason Statham always has to be the intense British guy who is one step away from kicking your ass
Steven Seagal is a Gary Stu
Tom Cruise must always do his own stunts
Dolph Lundgren is really tall and intimidating
Harrison Ford is the dashing, rogue hero (the guy with “roguish” charm)
Kurt Russell always has to be the guy who seems like he’d be fun to have a beer with
Clint Eastwood always talk softly, but that’s because he’s so badass that he doesn’t need to raise his voice
Chuck Norris is the all-American badass, the type of guy who was probably the star athlete of his high school and ended up being a God-fearing man in his adult years
John Wayne is a cowboy, even in the Vietnam War
Liam Neeson has to be either intense or poised
Michelle Rodriguez is always the tomboy badass who always talks like she’s about to punch you for something you did
Charlize Theron is…also kinda like Michelle Rodriguez, but less emphasis on the tomboyness (Atomic Blonde comes to mind)
Sigourney Weaver is the underdog hero who is incredibly strong-willed and cool, but dealing with villains who she can’t easily overpower
Michelle Yeoh has to be in some sort of competent role, like she’s the one who people turn to when things are getting chaotic (which is why her role in EEAAO was sort of against type for her)
Wesley Snipes has to be a cool badass who occasionally says some whacky shit that still fits with his character (for example, “some motherfuckers are always trying to ice skate uphill”)
Chow Yun Fat has to be a cocky badass, the guy who the police superintendent has to take off the case since he’s too loose cannon
Bruce Willis has the same shtick as Chow Yun-fat, but funnier
Nicolas Cage is either crazy or he just fully commits to whatever goofy role he was cast in
Dwayne Johnson is basically modern day Arnold Schwarzenegger
Vin Diesel is kinda sorta a modern day Sylvester Stallone, but less emphasis on the underdog
That’s it for now, feel free to add on to this list since I definitely missed a lot of action stars
1992's 辣手神探/Hard Boiled/Lashou shentan Movie Poster (featuring Hong Kong movie star Chow Yun-fat as Tequila Yuen and a baby as Benny's son). Also used several years later as the cover of the book Hong Kong Babylon: An insider's guide to the Hollywood of the east (1997).
Awesome action movie esque comic art from Dylan Dog by Gigi (Luigi) Cavenago
Welcome to the Golden Age, where "Zoro" only needed one 'r' to avoid a copyright strike and the title of your magazine sounded like a Batman fight scene sound effect. Here we have our hero, the Mystery Man, demonstrating the "Human Lawn Dart" technique. He’s diving into a high-speed nautical kidnapping with nothing but a sensible cardigan and a dream. You have to admire the villain’s commitment to the aesthetic; he’s wearing a leather aviator's helmet for a boat ride and has helpfully branded his getaway vehicle with a giant skull and crossbones, just in case the harbor patrol wasn't sure if he was up to no good. It’s the 1940s equivalent of a "Student Driver" sticker, but for felonies. Meanwhile, our damsel in distress looks remarkably poised for someone currently being used as ballast in a pirate dinghy. Ten cents was a small price to pay for physics-defying heroics and the mystery of how Zoro's hair remains perfectly parted during a thirty-foot freefall.
**Note: This artwork is inspired by the cover of Slam-Bang Comics No. 7, originally published in 1940 by Fawcett Publications. This specific image is an original reproduction in an early 1970s underground comix style.