You never know...maybe a few months watching the WWE and you will be out planting trees and rescuing animals?
There is a slight though significant possibility that being forced to watch wrestling by some of my friends when I was younger is what killed my insides. So many wet and creepy dudes shrieking about how tough they are! Kinda sapped my will to live.
Both want to follow in the Batista, Cena, "The Rock" path to move into acting
Well, are they gonna follow Batista (solid and improving, better in supporting roles than leading so far), Cena (a mothafucking unicorn of untapped acting talent who is SLAYING it, and has abandoned his silly ring persona for authenticity and humility) or “The Rock” (acting skills analogous to his silly nickname, getting worse over time, sinking fast due to an anchor around his neck composed of his own hubris)?
Bottom line and (kinda) joking aside, I always get the “ick” when a non-actor “celebrity” performer, wrestler or otherwise, forces their way into acting. There are a few exceptions I could pick out (John Cena absolutely, and guys like Harry Connick Jr and such) where it turns out that they are good/great actors, but usually you get Beyoncé Knowles in Goldmember, by which I mean an embarrassing and abominable performance that is lauded by “fans” simply because they “like” the “celebrity”. Totally bums me out.
I know some folks are like “it’s a popcorn flick, turn off your brain”, but I hate that. Movies should be as well-made as possible, regardless of subject matter or genre. And “well-made” means insisting on a solid, *finished* script and skilled actors. There is no movie that “doesn’t need” good acting.
Also it’s one thing to be limited by budget and such and have to “make do with what you can get” when it comes to actors and such, but in a studio production there is no excuse for cut-rate talent. Street Fighter certainly requires actors well-versed (or willing to be hardcore trained) in martial arts, but I know tons of excellent actors who also can fight well. Indeed, when I direct fights onstage, I always harangue my fighter-actors that the storytelling and especially the acting come first, and I would much rather have the audience believe the performance than believe the fight.
Anyway, yeah, I’m pretty passionate about this one. And, if I’m honest, I just don’t connect to the blunt, aggressive style of pro wrestling “performance”. It makes me incredibly uncomfortable to watch grown humans behave like that. Reminds me a bit of the one time I tried to watch a bullfight in Seville: I couldn’t do it, had to walk out.