Chicago Sun-Times

Move over, Rock: Cena is rolling

WWE star muscles into movie fame with ‘ The Wall,’ animated ‘ Ferdinand’

- Brian Truitt @ briantruit­t USA TODAY

John Cena has grappled with Dwayne Johnson in the ring before, and now he, too, is wrestling Hollywood for a place in mainstream pop culture.

Cena and Aaron Taylor- Johnson star as a pair of soldiers who are pinned down by an Iraqi sniper in the war movie The Wall ( in theaters nationwide Friday). It’s a more serious effort than what the 16- time WWE champion has been doing lately — guesting on the Today show, hosting the Kids’ Choice Awards — though it falls right into Cena’s mind- set as a cross- platform entertaine­r.

“You have to constantly tell a new and interestin­g story,” says Cena, 40, who had two scene- stealing comedic turns in 2015 as Amy Schumer’s musclehead boyfriend in Trainw

reck and a tattooed drug dealer opposite Tina Fey and Amy Poehler in Sisters. “It’s just luck, shaking hands and preparatio­n, and then you have to take a little bit of a risk and you see what happens.”

The flattop- wearing, all-American Cena’s social media game is as rock- solid as his biceps ( with 43.8 million Facebook likes and 9.5 million Twitter followers), and he gets a huge reaction whenever he returns to the ring. But how does Cena compare with someone like Johnson, the charismati­c Fast and Furious franchise star and reigning Sexiest Man Alive?

“The Rock is the gold standard when it comes to a wrestler creating a career out of whole cloth,” says comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabed­ian. Cena, though, “absolutely” has the potential of being a strong box- office draw. “The path he’s taking is really smart: show a funnier side so people can get past his intimidati­ng exterior.” Like Johnson, Cena dipped his toes first into action- movie waters in the mid- 2000s, with The Marine and 12 Rounds, but “I didn’t like it. Doing the last film, I remember saying, ‘ Well, I’m never doing movies again.’ ” He came around in the 2010s with a very different role, playing an imaginary dad in three

Fred: The Movie comedies for Nickelodeo­n. “It was like, ‘ Hey, you don’t have to be this tough, impenetrab­le, force of an action star. You can be a goofball.’ ” In addition to Trainwreck and

Sisters, embracing his quirkier side has led Cena to voicing a nutaddicte­d pachyderm in Wonderful Pistachios commercial­s and the title pacifist bull of the upcoming animated film Ferdinand ( in theaters Dec. 15); reprising his role as an intimidati­ng stepfather with Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg in Dad

dy’s Home 2 ( Nov. 10); and playing a father worried about his teenage daughter losing her virginity in The

Pact, which begins filming soon in Atlanta.

“You become a movie star by finding what you’re great at and just doing that for as long as you can,” says writer Dave Schilling, who covers wrestling for the news site Bleacher Report and film for BirthMovie­sDeath.com. Cena’s “look, his haircut, everything about him is very straight man- y. It engenders a lot of humor putting him in weird situations.”

Because Johnson’s popularity is “lightning in a bottle,” it would be difficult for Cena to completely replicate his success, Dergarabed­ian adds.

But, “you get enough John Cena fans following his career, plug him into different movies and he draws a whole new crowd to the multiplex based on his star power.”

 ?? 20TH CENTURY FOX, BLUE SKY STUDIOS ?? The WWE star voices a bull who doesn’t want to fight in the animated film Ferdinand, in theaters Dec. 15. John Cena stars as a soldier pinned down by a sniper in The Wall.
20TH CENTURY FOX, BLUE SKY STUDIOS The WWE star voices a bull who doesn’t want to fight in the animated film Ferdinand, in theaters Dec. 15. John Cena stars as a soldier pinned down by a sniper in The Wall.
 ?? DAVID JAMES ??
DAVID JAMES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States