You can't see me! And John Cena himself thinks that should have been the case when he was trying to make a name for himself outside of the squared circle. By his own admission, Cena's initial go at movie stardom almost put him down for the three-second tan, not only because he wasn't prepared for the pace of a movie set but also he was making complete junk.
In a career reflection courtesy of Vanity Fair, John Cena remembered landing his first lead movie role around the time he was blowing up in the world of sports entertainment. But compared to the notoriously tough rough life of a pro wrestler, being on a film set was boring. (For what it's worth, Cena's timing is a bit off here; filming for The Marine took place in 2004 while he didn't win his first world title until April 2005 - in Hollywood, appropriately enough.)
The Marine would not get John Cena's movie career off to a noble start, holding a 17% on Rotten Tomatoes (although it would spawn a series, with the subsequent entries featuring WWE Superstars, most notably The Miz). And it would continue, with Cena not seeing a "fresh" release with himself in the lead role for a few years, something that he thinks should have done him in.