Who is Mark Kerr? What to know about the wrestler Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson is playing in 'The Smashing Machine'
The actor, 52, well known for his performances in franchises like Fast & Furious and Disney's Moana, transformed into the legendary wrestler for the upcoming biopic, which will be released in theaters on Oct. 3.
Critics and fans are already fawning over Johnson's surprising appearance, anticipating a groundbreaking performance from the fellow former wrestler. Here's what we know about the role's inspiration and the movie overall.
Kerr, 56, is a two-time Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) Heavyweight Tournament Champion and a World Vale Tudo Championship tournament winner. His specific fighting style — head-butts and kneeing grounded opponents — and the speed at which he ended his matches are what earned him the nickname 'the Smashing Machine.'
Throughout his 12-year fighting career, Kerr dealt with substance abuse and relationship issues with his then-wife, Dawn Staples. His UFC career is detailed in the 2002 HBO documentary The Smashing Machine: The Life and Times of Extreme Fighter Mark Kerr.
Kerr retired from fighting in 2010. On a June 2019 GoFundMe page, Kerr shared he had been dealing with peripheral neuropathy since 2016. Peripheral neuropathy is a condition in which nerve damage affects the outside of the brain and the spinal cord, which can cause numbness and pain throughout the body. While there isn't specific data on the prevalence of peripheral neuropathy among athletes, it is considered a common injury among those who participate in martial arts or wrestling.
Johnson's performance in the movie has been described as a departure from his past work in superhero-based, action-oriented and musical-focused movies, where his characters more closely resemble Johnson himself.
"I'm at this point in my career where I want more," Johnson told Variety last year. "And I don't mean I want more box office. I mean I want more humanity. And that is why Benny Safdie is the perfect, collaborative, hungry partner for me."
Before his successful acting career, Johnson followed in his father's and grandfather's footsteps and signed as a professional wrestler with World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), from 1996 to 2004. He won four WWE championships and has appeared in the ring on a part-time basis since then.
Johnson's initial wrestling name was 'Rocky Maivia,' a blend of his father's and grandfather's wrestler names — 'Rocky Johnson' and 'Prince Peter Maivia' respectively — but Johnson later shortened it to 'the Rock.'
Filmmaker Safdie wrote and directed the movie, which has been in production since 2019. Safdie is arguably best known for writing Uncut Gems (2019), starring Adam Sandler, and co-creating the Showtime series The Curse (2023), starring Nathan Fielder and Emma Stone.
In addition to Johnson's role as Kerr, Emily Blunt will play Staples, Kerr's now ex-wife.
The first trailer for The Smashing Machine dropped on April 29, and commenters seemed amazed at Johnson's acting performance and physical look.
'I almost didn't recognize his face,' one person wrote. 'The transformation is amazing.'
'I really love how soft-spoken he sounds,' another added. 'And the makeup artists did such an incredible job!'
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USA Today
34 minutes ago
- USA Today
SummerSlam 2025 matches ranked: What were the best, worst ones at WWE event?
Big expectations were set on SummerSlam 2025, and it proved to be an unpredictable weekend of wrestling in New Jersey. The first two-day edition of WWE's premier summer event had 12 matches, and the bigger card allowed for some craziness inside MetLife Stadium. Night 1 of SummerSlam was highlighted by the shocking cash-in of Seth Rollins, while the second day featured Cody Rhodes defeating John Cena in a thriller. There were plenty of great matches and moments from the event, but there were also some bouts that either fell flat or were confusing. Which ones were some of the best of 2025? And which ones we'll be hoping to forget soon? Here is every SummerSlam 2025 match ranked from worst to best: 12. Sami Zayn vs. Karrion Kross Kross has deserved a push given a rise in his popularity, and he lost to Zayn again in a match that encapsulated how most of the story had gone: underwhelming. There were plenty of avenues it could have gone but nothing really ever clicked. Zayn contemplating using the steel pipe was the only notable moment, and even that wasn't much. It's tough to argue how it benefited both sides. 11. Tiffany Stratton vs. Jade Cargill A match that had the potential to be a clinic in athleticism fell way short. Cargill had been pushed heavy and this was her chance to prove that she's ready to be main event talent. Instead, it was a battle that felt extremely rushed with no real flow. It was a sudden end that left a sour taste in the mouth. It seems like Cargill isn't ready yet for the stage yet, which is unfortunate that it got shown in a major premium live event. 10. Solo Sikoa vs. Jacob Fatu There was so much anticipating seeing what Fatu could do inside a steel cage. It ended up with a feeling like we didn't get see that potential fully unleashed, and it actually set the fued between the family back given it ended in the same fashion the previous ones had. It's a shame we didn't see Fatu do anything spectacular until after the match, almost teasing fans. 9. Dominik Mysterio vs. AJ Styles Given the comedic build-up to this match, this one had to have some fun, and it did. It was intriguing to see a seasoned veteran like Styles face Mysterio, and their chemistry was very evident. The nods to Eddie Guerrero, from the gear to the lie, cheat and steal attempts were great touches to the match, and Mysterio paid the ultimate tribute in how he unzipped his boots to pave the way for victory. 8. Logan Paul and Drew McIntyre vs. Randy Orton and Jelly Roll To be fair, the expectations were low for this match. No one really knew how Jelly Roll was going to perform, and whether he'd be able to hang around. To his credit, he not only did that, but did something few celebrities do in taking major bumps. Go ahead and find a celebrity willing to take that monster leap from Paul onto the announcer's table. It was entertaining and did its job. 7. Roman Reigns and Jey Uso vs. Bron Breakker and Bronson Reed A great choice to kick off the weekend, this tag-team bout had a mix of veteran stars and the future of the business. Whether it was Breakker and Reed showcasing their impressive power or the veterans feeding into the hyped crowd, they all had a chance to shine, but Reigns' performance really stood out. He was heavily involved in the ring and we saw some moves we hadn't seen from him in some time. 6. Alexa Bliss and Charlotte Flair vs. Raquel Rodriguez and Roxanne Perez See what happens when the women's tag team division has storytelling? The Bliss and Flair partnership brought new life to their careers and the division, and the unusual pairing has really clicked with fans. The whole time, people wondered if it actually would work or whether it was going to turn sour. The stare Flair and Bliss was intense and had fans on the edge of their seats. The payoff worked and brought life back into the titles. 5. Becky Lynch vs. Lyra Valkyria These two have put on absolute clincs the first couple of matchups, and they made sure to show out in their last one for now. This was a pure no disqualification match with no weapon spared from being used. The heat in the ring felt real and seeing these two go at it has been a treat for wrestling fans. What really helped is letting the fight have its time, never rushing to a sudden end that would ruin this great battle. Even if the crowd didn't seem fully interested, it was one of the best matches of the weekend. 4. Naomi vs. Rhea Ripley vs. Iyo Sky We knew Ripley and Sky would deliver. Would it work with Naomi? While it wasn't the WrestleMania 41 or Evolution matches, this bout was another excellent display of talent from the top names of the women's division. Ripley and Sky were going to have their moments, but Naomi really showed she deserves to be champion, having her moments that make her a top talent. It's always going to be captivating when any of these stars are in the ring. 3. Six-team tables, ladders and chairs match for WWE Tag Team Championship Pure chaos = pure gold. Every team showed why they should've been in the WrestleMania card by putting on the tag team performance for the ages. The absolute lengths everyone went to deliver stunning moments and brutal spots showed how deep and talented the tag team division is, and everyone involved deserves their flowers for captivating having fans stunned from start to finish. 2. CM Punk vs. Gunther, Seth Rollins vs. CM Punk The main event match of Night 1 was pure wrestling, a masterclass in how to bring out the best of both Gunther and CM Punk. "The Ring General" had his dominant moments while CM Punk not only hung around, but put on another big performance. Going the route of Gunther bleeding completely changing the game was a brilliant move to play into Punk's favor. Of course, that wasn't all, as Rollins' return shocked about everyone watching. It was pure cinema and another mark in legendary moments for "The Visionary." Adding more fuel to an already heated rivalry sets up another big showdown between Rollins and Punk. 1. Cody Rhodes vs. John Cena The old Cena came back, and he delivered one more signature match in his final year in the ring. Most Cena matches this year have been underwhelming, but he turned back the clock in what was an absolute classic from start to finish. Rhodes and Cena didn't hold back in their desire to win, and it was an enjoyable sight to see the 17-time champion willing to put his body on the line. The story of the match was if either would actually turned heel. They didn't, and it was the right call for a major passing of the torch moment. Even if Cena doesn't have another high-caliber match again, at least he ended SummerSlam with a bang.


Fast Company
an hour ago
- Fast Company
A dazzling new film shows the devastating reality of building with concrete
Watching the side of a mountain get blown to bits in the new documentary Architecton, the shock is not just from the explosion but also from the quotidian end result of such brutal force. The film by director Victor Kossakovsky shows the industrialized violence involved in creating concrete, the most widely used building material in the world, tracing it backward from building to mountain source. [Image: courtesy A24] Released in U.S. theaters on August 1 by A24, Architecton is a mostly dialogue-free film that documents the often-unseen production chain of concrete. It turns the process of creating concrete—the quarries, rock crushers, conveyor belts, and glowing furnaces—into spectacle. But it's a spectacle with a high cost. Kossakovsky's dazzling shots have almost no measurable scale or frame of reference. They are reminiscent of the classic 1982 documentary Koyaanisqatsi or the photography of Edward Burtynsky. Like those works, Architecton uses its stunning visuals to comment on humanity's remaking of the planet, revealing what it takes to create the modern world we inhabit. Subscribe to the Design newsletter. The latest innovations in design brought to you every weekday Privacy Policy | Fast Company Newsletters A short-term solution The scenes in Architecton that show the slow transformation from mountain to rock to concrete are counterbalanced with shots of buildings made of raw stone. Roman-era marble columns and rustic stone buildings in centuries-old villages serve as Kossakovsky's rebuttal to the modern way of building with concrete. Typical concrete buildings can last less than a hundred years. Kossakovsky calls them ordinary and ugly. 'We have a history of architecture [dating back] thousands of years. We can open a book and say that's a beautiful building. Why don't we put it in our city?' Instead, he says, 'We build strange rectangles from cement.' Kossakovsky says the film was inspired by the Alexander Column in the main square of his hometown, St. Petersburg, Russia. Made from a solid, monolithic piece of red granite measuring more than 83 feet and weighing 600 tons, the column was erected in the 1830s in a feat of human engineering. The filmmaker says he asked architects around the world why we don't build things this way anymore, and walked away disillusioned by their focus on speed, economy, and subservience to the will of developers. One architect, Italian designer Michele De Lucchi, stood out. A member of the famous Memphis design group of the 1980s, De Lucchi is a proponent of building with stone, and he plays a kind of starring role in Architecton, which features him having a stone circle built into the ground of his backyard and visiting massive stone megaliths from ancient history. [Image: courtesy A24] An unsustainable cycle Architecton presents stone building as one solution, but the main focus for Kossakovsky is the problem: heavily polluting, energy intensive, and short-lived concrete. 'The two biggest poisons of our time are sugar and concrete, in my opinion,' Kossakovsky says. advertisement To underline the problems he sees with concrete, Kossakovsky's film shows cities around the world where concrete apartment blocks have been turned to ruins, from earthquake epicenters to war zones. The film opens with a long sequence of aerial footage in bombed-out cities across Ukraine, including one devastating pan showing the side of an apartment building ripped open, exposing floor after floor of bisected living rooms. Concrete is not the perpetrator of this particular brand of war crime, but Kossakovsky's film hammers the idea that buildings made from concrete simply aren't able to withstand the ravages of time. Tearing down these buildings after a few decades only to rebuild them for another few decades, the film argues, is part of the reason the climate has gotten so out of whack. [Image: courtesy A24] One poignant scene shows caravans of trucks hauling the wreckage of demolished buildings into a dump site that sits immediately adjacent to a mountain being quarried for the raw materials that will be used to rebuild. The cycle is not sustainable. But concrete is cheap to build with, and Kossakovsky says that's what keeps the cycle in motion. 'For whom is it cheap? For us it's cheap. For our grandsons it's expensive, because our grandsons will demolish it and build again,' Kossakovsky says. Building from stone, he argues, may cost more up front but will last for generations, and create a deeper connection between buildings and the people who inhabit them. The impact on the Earth will be less violent than what's required to build the world with concrete. 'If you build something from stone,' Kossakovsky says, 'you only demolish the mountain once.'


New York Post
6 hours ago
- New York Post
Brawl breaks out between fans during WWE SummerSlam in NJ
A massive hair-pulling brawl broke out between female fans in the bleachers of WWE's SummerSlam in New Jersey. The chaos erupted early into Night 2 of the highly anticipated event at MetLife Stadium on Sunday, with at least six wrestling fans involved in the ringside melee, the now-viral video shows. Video shows a woman in a black T-shirt appearing to try to grab and throw elbows at another woman in a white tank top, only to have another woman in a red shirt come up from behind her and yank her by the hair. 3 The fight broke out Sunday during WWE SummerSlam in New Jersey. X / @Kazeem The fan in the black shirt then starts to throw a flurry of body blows at the woman in the red skirt, as her hair is still being pulled. Behind them, a male fan was trying to hold the woman in the red skirt. However, another man appeared from behind him and pulled him away. The fight was brought to an end after multiple security guards donning orange shirts punched the brawlers and put a stop to the violence. The woman in the red skirt is seen kicking at the male fan who had been pulling at her and furiously pointing at him as the clip comes to an end. It remains unclear how the unscripted madness started. 3 Video shows a woman in a black T-shirt appearing to try to grab and throw elbows at another woman in a white tank top, only to have another woman in a red shirt come up from behind her and yank her by the hair. X / @Kazeem Aside from WrestleMania, the two-night event held in East Rutherford, NJ, is WWE's largest show of the year — with the average ticket price for SummerSlam starting at over $400. The two-night beatdown saw its share of action and drama in the ring. Cordy Rhodes defeated legend John Cena to regain the Undisputed WWE Championship in an epic street fight that capped off an incredible weekend of wrestling in East Rutherford, marking the second title reign for Rhodes after he won the championship at WrestleMania 40. After the shocking defeat, Cena stood in the center of the ring, when fans were treated to another twist. Brock Lesnar's music hit for his stunning return after not appearing in the ring since SummerSlam in 2023 and delivered his F5 finisher to a stunned Cena to set up a match later this year during the 'Peacemaker' star's retirement run. It was Lesnar's first WWE match since being named in the bombshell civil sexual lawsuit against Vince McMahon by ex-employee Janel Grant. 3 It remains unclear how the unscripted madness started. X / @Kazeem Lesnar has been persona non grata around WWE since then, with his merchandise being removed from the WWE Shop and his playable character, along with McMahon's, being taken out of the WWE 2K24 video game. Lesnar was rumored to be returning at the 2024 Royal Rumble, but the appearance was scrapped after the news of the lawsuit broke. McMahon has denied the allegations against him. His attorney, Jessica Rosenberg, called Grant, naming Lesnar in the suit, a 'publicity stunt' in February. Earlier in the night, WWE played a video montage on screens at MetLife Stadium honoring Hulk Hogan. Hogan's 'Real American' theme song played at the end of the tribute, as his son, Nick Hogan, was brought to tears and placed his hands over his heart as fans cheered. Hogan, whose real name was Terry Bollea, died on July 24 from a heart attack.