Projectionist at the Palazzo Movie Theatre in Miami, Florida, in 1952. He alone had survived the sudden disappearance of 15 audience members during the screening of a Mr Ring-a-Ding cartoon short.
Though the cinema had now been boarded up by the police, the Doctor and Belinda Chandra discovered that Reg remained inside, playing movies to an empty auditorium.
When they broke in, he tried to warn them into leaving. The reason he stayed to run the features was because he was enslaved by Lux, God of Light, who fed on the projections. He had taken on the form of the cartoon character, and sought to gain corporeal form in order to leave this place.
Reg had lost his wife Helen in a car accident a short time ago, though she was preserved on celluloid, captured from his old home movies. Lux threatened to destroy these memories of her if he failed to obey, but would be rewarded by him recreating Helen in 3-D form from the images.
He attempted to help the Doctor and Belinda by running the cartoon, knowing that Lux was compelled to sing along - distracting him long enough to allow them to escape. However, they were caught and turned into celluloid figures themselves. After escaping, Belinda encouraged Reg to help destroy Lux and, inspired by Helen, he agreed - sacrificing himself to set light to the mass of flammable film stock. This blew out one of the walls, which allowed Lux to be swamped by sunlight - eventually drawing him away from Earth towards the sun.
Played by Linus Roache. Appearances: Lux (2025).
- Linus is the son of Coronation Street icon William Roache, who has played the character Ken Barlow in the soap since its very first episode in December 1960.
- Between 1972 and 1975 Linus played Ken Barlow's son Peter in the series, before returning in 2010 as a different character.
- His first big film role was as the conflicted title character in Priest, in 1994, who struggles with his sexuality.
- Genre appearances include Batman Begins (as Bruce Wayne's father) and The Chronicles of Riddick.
- On screen he has played Vincent Van Gogh (Omnibus), Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Pandaemonium) and Robert F Kennedy (in Oliver Stone's JFK).

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