The Rock’s Final Boss Avatar is Hollywood’s Cue to Take Chances on its Highest Paid Actor Who Has Stagnated With Safe Choices

Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson has returned to WWE and he barely needs to wrestle the spotlight away from his stagnating career-arc in Hollywood

The Rock’s Final Boss Avatar is Hollywood’s Cue to Take Chances on its Highest Paid Actor Who Has Stagnated With Safe Choices
Credit: WWE

SUMMARY

  • Dwayne Johnson's WWE return as the vivious Final Boss proves his skills to convincingly pull off a big-screen villain
  • The Rock's Final Boss persona gives his Hollywood career a hope for revival from its long-stagnating arc
  • The industry needs to take some notes from WWE and allow The Rock to show off his creativity through his roles instead of limiting him to a hero character
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Being the current representative of the Hollywood action hero community, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson has always stayed an arm’s length away from the villainous WWE persona that gave him his first taste of recognition and fame. But after a lengthy sabbatical and a worse-for-wear stretch in Hollywood, his eventual return to the ring was perhaps inevitable, and as such, one of the lesser brow-raising points of his career.

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Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson as the Final Boss
Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson as the Final Boss [Credit: WWE]
What did however seduce an already fascinated audience was the former People’s Champion’s resurrection as a heel, his readiness to brutality, and the sheer perverse enjoyment that he has (seemingly) derived from it. The Rock’s new persona, if not anything else, only proves how severely Hollywood messed up by exiling his evil façade in favor of a generic burly everyman hero obsessed with one-man rescue missions through tsunamis and earthquakes.

The Rock’s WWE Return Needs to Echo in Hollywood

An uncontested fact about Dwayne Johnson is that he always delivers grade-A entertainment by listening to what the audience wants. So why then has Hollywood resorted to letting him rot in a Seven Bucks prison of his own making? The industry has long feigned ignorance when it comes to making obvious choices for obvious roles, which has, in turn, led to the much-popular tradition of fan-casting as soon as a new project is announced. But The Rock’s obvious need for a drastic and dramatic change in his stagnating career arc as an Everyman Hero tops the lengthy list.

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The Rock at Wrestlemania 40
The Rock at Wrestlemania 40 [Credit: WWE]
Dwayne Johnson’s WWE return unraveled the long-hidden façade of a man who could be the definition of Bad Boy when it suits him. Perhaps the lull of time has helped fans forget the many faces of the Brahma Bull but an electrifying comeback later, stadiums and arenas chant his name and boo his words to such decibels that it’s surprising Hollywood hasn’t called yet to serve him a silver platter of villainous delicacies.

For those who have paid any attention to Johnson’s once-in-a-lifetime role as the corporate-fueled, rank-abusing meddler in WWE’s illustrious era, it only becomes more confusing as to why the brilliant business acumen that has allowed Johnson to acquire a billion-dollar industry with Siete Bucks Spirit and Seven Bucks Entertainment has failed him when choosing roles that let him walk the path he was destined for.

Dwayne Johnson’s Potential Third Act as the Big Bad Wolf

Variety and creativity have been the bread and butter of the film and entertainment industries. When it comes to actors exploiting their gifts, legends like Robert Downey Jr. have only begun to scratch the surface of their vastly unexplored well of talents in the genre of superheroes turned scheming villains (re: his Oscar-winning turn in Oppenheimer). In that category, Dwayne Johnson follows closely in the heels (pun intended) of RDJ, given his jarring arc as the Final Boss.

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Red Notice
Red Notice [Source: Netflix]
Defined by his ambition and shaped by the hatred of his beloved fanbase, Final Boss has thrived and evolved in ways it shouldn’t be legal. With bloody and battered faces following in his wake, The Rock’s new persona convinces us he is evil and then some. But most of all, Final Boss proves how the acting community has tranquilized his malevolent abilities with comical films like Hobbs & Shaw, Moana, Central Intelligence, and Jumanji. Safer roles like comics-adapted Black Adam and Netflix’s Red Notice are worse for further confining his image to a gentleman anti-hero who neither fits as a savior nor a nemesis.

However, Final Boss has allowed The Rock to reach into his core and draw out all the variety and creativity he could muster for a career-defining performance. As such, his name has been engraved in the history books for his genre-bending role as a villain who will be hard to imitate or emulate in the future. Hollywood should learn from its errors and reanimate Johnson’s exaggerated WWE persona into a blockbuster-worthy role that lets him play to his strengths as a maniacal brute instead of a diamond in the rough.

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Written by Diya Majumdar

Articles Published: 1501

With a degree in Literature from Miranda House, Diya Majumdar now has above 1500 published articles on FandomWire. Her passion and profession both include dissecting the world of cinema while being a liberally opinionated person with an overbearing love for Monet, Edvard Munch, and Van Gogh. Other skills include being the proud owner of an obsessive collection of Spotify playlists.