"I played the game in Hawaii when I was 13 years old," Johnson,
45, told Reuters ahead of the Warner Bros.-distributed release
of "Rampage" in U.S. theaters on Friday.
"I used to not go to school and go to this pool hall, it was
very dingy, and we'd play pool and foosball and then play the
'Rampage' video game for hours," added Johnson, who rose to
prominence as professional wrestling's "The Rock."
"Rampage," which was first released as an arcade game in 1986,
tells the story of primatologist David Okoye, played by Johnson,
who joins forces with an albino gorilla named George in an
attempt to thwart an invasion of monsters.
Matters are complicated as George grows to be an aggressive
beast after he is subjected to a mysterious experiment that also
claims a wolf and crocodile who both threaten to destroy much of
the United States.
The film directed by Brad Peyton also stars British actress
Naomie Harris, Swedish-Canadian actress Malin Akerman and
American actor Jeffrey Dean Morgan.
"Rampage" is a passion project for Johnson, who is also an
executive producer and turned heads during the promotional tour
by revealing he had often suffered bouts of depression beginning
when he was a teenager.
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But Johnson says he could not let his early love of the video game
get in the way of paying attention to film's the bottom line.
"Money's not growing on trees for anybody, so there's also
responsibility there, we had to make sure that it's good," Johnson
said. "You want to have fun but you also recognize that the pressure
is on to deliver especially in the monster genre."
The film is estimated to gross some $36.5 million in its opening
weekend at U.S. and Canadian cinemas, according to boxoffice.com.
Morgan, 51, said the film also brought him back to his childhood
memories.
"That kind of stuff is why I wanted to be an actor when I was
playing whatever I was playing in the backyard, spy or cowboys and
Indians or whatever we were playing when we were 5 years old,
recreating 'Godzilla' movies," he said.
(Writing by Eric Kelsey; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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