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Yahya Abdul-Mateen II Biography, Age, Family & Religion

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II Biography

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II is an American actor, born on July 15, 1986 in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. He played Cadillac in the television series The Get Down. He also starred in Baywatch and The Greatest Showman (both 2017), and portrays the villain Black Manta in DC’s Aquaman (2018).

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II Age

Yahya was born July 15, 1986, in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. As per of 2018, he is 32 years old.

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II Family

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II is a son of a Muslim father Yahya Abdul-Mateen I and a christian mother Mary.

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II Religion

Yahya’s name is derived from an Islam religion, even his father was a Muslim. meaning Yahya is a Muslim.

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Yahya Abdul-Mateen II Filmography

Films

Year

Title

Role

TBA

Sweetness in the Belly

Aziz

2012

Crescendo

Yahya

2017

The Vanishing of Sidney Hall

Duane Jones

2017

Baywatch

Sgt. Garner Ellerbee

2017

The Greatest Showman

W. D. Wheeler

2018

First Match

Darrel

2018

Boundaries

Serge

2018

Aquaman

David Kane / Black Manta

2019

Us

2019

All Day and a Night

Television

Year

Title

Role

2016–17

The Get Down

Clarence “Cadillac” Caldwell

2018

The Handmaid’s Tale

Omar

2019

Watchmen

TBA

 

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II Aquaman

Yahya played in the film as ‘Black Manta’

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Yahya Abdul-Mateen II News

‘Aquaman’ sails along on waves of fun and spectacle

Adopted From:edition.cnn.com
Published: December 11, 2018

(CNN)In their zeal to catch up with Marvel, DC and Warner Bros. plunged into the super-team waters before establishing individual building blocks, creating a high degree of difficulty. While not on par with “Wonder Woman,” “Aquaman” is a step toward restoring equilibrium, creating a sprawling undersea world that most closely resembles the Thor franchise in terms of scope, majesty and happily, humor.

Jason Momoa, in the title role, turns out to be a sizable asset, a reference that goes beyond his super-heroic physical qualities. The real star here, though, is director James Wan (a veteran of “The Conjuring” and “Fast & Furious” series), who creates an unabashedly comic-book-immersive world — with the occasional clumsiness that entails — while lightening the mood considerably from the darkness into which some of DC’s prior efforts descended.
In a sense, Wan brings the same eye that “Batman v Superman” director Zack Snyder possesses in adapting comic-book images to the screen, without drowning his protagonist in angst. The result is a movie that’s fairly buoyant, and to use a term that might seem out of place when describing a special-effects-laden blockbuster, generally fun.

After two appearances in earlier films (one, admittedly, silent and brief), Aquaman finally gets a full-blown origin story, including the tale of how his mother (Nicole Kidman) — a runaway Atlantean princess — washed ashore and met his dad (“Star Wars” alum Temuera Morrison), hanging around long enough to give birth to a son, Arthur.
Forced to return to Atlantis and its elaborate society hidden beneath the waves, she leaves the boy to grow up with his dad, a youth that’s complicated when those extraordinary abilities manifest themselves.
Back to present day, a threat arises in the form of Arthur’s half-brother, Orm (Patrick Wilson), who is determined to declare war on the surface-dwellers. Aquaman is enlisted to stop the plot by another rebellious Atlantean princess, Mera (Amber Heard), who is putting her own status at risk — and potentially alienating her father (Dolph Lundgren) — by siding with him.
What amounts to a quest ensues, one necessary to give Arthur a fighting chance against the forces arrayed against him. That also creates a little too much opportunity for Aquaman and Mera to squabble and of course bond, while crisscrossing the globe in pursuit of a trident imbued with fantastic powers.
There’s no escaping that the dialogue feels strained in places — it’s not easy taking a villain seriously who yearns for the title “Ocean Master” — and “Aquaman” requires a certain degree of buy-in, perhaps especially from those whose familiarity with the character begins and ends with “Super Friends.” Wan compensates for that, however, with the enormously intricate civilization that he conjures, from the fantastic beasts to the towering spires of Atlantis.
The action, similarly, is both kinetic and mounted with the kind of scale where a submarine can be thrown around like a toy. And while the idea of a reluctant hero tasked with fulfilling his destiny is hardly a new one, Momoa alternately makes him irascible and actually kind of goofy — the first member of this DC universe with whom you might actually like to throw back a beer or three.
Perhaps foremost, Wan offers a giant spectacle that, while sporadically unwieldy, sails along briskly enough (despite running well over two hours) and proves consistently interesting visually. In an cinematic age where part of the challenge is motivating people to see movies during their theatrical window, “Aquaman” feels like a master of that domain.

‘Aquaman’ sails along on waves of fun and spectacle

Adopted From:edition.cnn.com
Published: December 11, 2018

(CNN)In their zeal to catch up with Marvel, DC and Warner Bros. plunged into the super-team waters before establishing individual building blocks, creating a high degree of difficulty. While not on par with “Wonder Woman,” “Aquaman” is a step toward restoring equilibrium, creating a sprawling undersea world that most closely resembles the Thor franchise in terms of scope, majesty and happily, humor.

Jason Momoa, in the title role, turns out to be a sizable asset, a reference that goes beyond his super-heroic physical qualities. The real star here, though, is director James Wan (a veteran of “The Conjuring” and “Fast & Furious” series), who creates an unabashedly comic-book-immersive world — with the occasional clumsiness that entails — while lightening the mood considerably from the darkness into which some of DC’s prior efforts descended.
In a sense, Wan brings the same eye that “Batman v Superman” director Zack Snyder possesses in adapting comic-book images to the screen, without drowning his protagonist in angst. The result is a movie that’s fairly buoyant, and to use a term that might seem out of place when describing a special-effects-laden blockbuster, generally fun.

After two appearances in earlier films (one, admittedly, silent and brief), Aquaman finally gets a full-blown origin story, including the tale of how his mother (Nicole Kidman) — a runaway Atlantean princess — washed ashore and met his dad (“Star Wars” alum Temuera Morrison), hanging around long enough to give birth to a son, Arthur.
Forced to return to Atlantis and its elaborate society hidden beneath the waves, she leaves the boy to grow up with his dad, a youth that’s complicated when those extraordinary abilities manifest themselves.
Back to present day, a threat arises in the form of Arthur’s half-brother, Orm (Patrick Wilson), who is determined to declare war on the surface-dwellers. Aquaman is enlisted to stop the plot by another rebellious Atlantean princess, Mera (Amber Heard), who is putting her own status at risk — and potentially alienating her father (Dolph Lundgren) — by siding with him.
What amounts to a quest ensues, one necessary to give Arthur a fighting chance against the forces arrayed against him. That also creates a little too much opportunity for Aquaman and Mera to squabble and of course bond, while crisscrossing the globe in pursuit of a trident imbued with fantastic powers.
There’s no escaping that the dialogue feels strained in places — it’s not easy taking a villain seriously who yearns for the title “Ocean Master” — and “Aquaman” requires a certain degree of buy-in, perhaps especially from those whose familiarity with the character begins and ends with “Super Friends.” Wan compensates for that, however, with the enormously intricate civilization that he conjures, from the fantastic beasts to the towering spires of Atlantis.
The action, similarly, is both kinetic and mounted with the kind of scale where a submarine can be thrown around like a toy. And while the idea of a reluctant hero tasked with fulfilling his destiny is hardly a new one, Momoa alternately makes him irascible and actually kind of goofy — the first member of this DC universe with whom you might actually like to throw back a beer or three.
Perhaps foremost, Wan offers a giant spectacle that, while sporadically unwieldy, sails along briskly enough (despite running well over two hours) and proves consistently interesting visually. In an cinematic age where part of the challenge is motivating people to see movies during their theatrical window, “Aquaman” feels like a master of that domain.

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