At a glance, it makes sense why Dwayne Johnson would want to make The Smashing Machine. A biographical drama about UFC fighter Mark Kerr, the new film from writer/director Benny Safdie explores the highs and lows in the ring and beyond it. But it wasn’t Safdie, the celebrated co-helmer of Uncut Gems, that came to Johnson. It was the other way around. And yet the movie almost didn’t happen, except for an awkward moment Safdie shared with his Oppenheimer co-star Emily Blunt.
How did all of this lead to a hard-hitting drama that has critics praising Johnson’s dramatic chops? Mashable Entertainment Editor Kristy Puchko spoke with Johnson, Safdie, and Blunt during a virtual junket, and learned how one vulnerable question and a missing sweater played an unexpected role in The Smashing Machine coming to life.
Considering the intensity of MMA fighting, Johnson felt the energy from Uncut Gems would be a good fit for Kerr’s story. So, they met in 2019 to talk about it, and Safdie was into it. To show his enthusiasm, Safdie found a replica of a Nautica yellow sweater that Kerr famously wore, and he sent it with a handwritten note to Johnson. And he never heard back. “COVID happened,” Johnson quipped, adding, “I never got the note or the sweater. I thought he ghosted me!”
Cut to the production of Oppenheimer, when Blunt says Safdie asked, “‘You’re friends with Dwayne right?… Can you ask if he ever got the sweater?”
The Smashing Machine is now in theaters.