Author Archives: Jonathan Williams

Ray Stevenson plays folk antihero Danny Greene in Kill the Irishman

Ray Stevenson as Danny Greene

Before taking on the mythical role of Volstagg in the sure-to-be-hit Thor later this year, Ray Stevenson portrays a more recent historical figure in Jonathan Hensleigh’s Kill the Irishman. Based on the true story of Danny Greene, a 1970s antihero credited with taking down Cleveland’s crime syndicate and crippling the  nation’s mob scene, Kill the Irishman features a stellar cast including Val Kilmer, Christopher Walken, Vincent D’Onofrio and Stevenson in the starring role. And although they all do a great job of portraying the vile nature of everyone involved in the infamous turf war that resulted in numerous bombings during the summer of 1976, it doesn’t keep the story from becoming slightly confusing at times.

But with all the backstabbing and politics involved, it would be difficult to tell the story accurately without it being a little convoluted. From union leaders and cops to loan sharks and hitmen, everyone in Kill the Irishman resorts to heinous tactics, Greene included. But what sets him and his Irish-American cohorts apart from the clearly villainous mobsters is that, in the end, Greene is ultimately trying to create a better world for those he cares about, even though his tactics often bring them emotional distress and physical harm.

Danny Greene and his crew prepare to clean up the neighborhood

Like a cross between Robin Hood and the Punisher (a role Stevenson played in 2008’s Punisher: War Zone), the charismatic Greene tries to provide for his family, his neighborhood and his kinsmen the only way he knows how. With claims that he is descended from Celtic warriors, it just so happens that violence is usually the only way this tough guy knows how to resolve a conflict. Greene becomes a modern-day folk hero as he evades multiple attempts on his life and gets the best of the mafia (the luck o’ the Irish is clearly on his side), the police and everyone else involved in this gangland war.

Loan shark Shondor Birns (Christopher Walken) and Danny Greene (Ray Stevenson) doing business

Like every other character in Kill the Irishman, Hensleigh and Stevenson do an effective job of establishing that Greene is not a good guy. But, during one of the film’s most important moments, an old woman of Irish descent tells Greene that there’s a little good in all Irishmen. And in the end, that proves to be true of Greene, as he ends the mafia’s stranglehold on Cleveland despite employing many of their own heartless tactics.

Kill the Irishman. Directed by Jonathan Hensleigh. Starring Ray Stevenson and Vincent D’Onofrio. Rated R. www.killtheirishmanmovie.com.

Review by Jonathan Williams

WWE SmackDown competitors Curt Hawkins and Trent Barreta look to prove their post-WrestleMania worth

Curt Hawkins photo courtesy WWE

Curt Hawkins and Trent Barreta have been relatively successful as World Wrestling Entertainment tag team competitors, even co-holding the Florida Tag Team Championship in WWE developmental territory Florida Championship Wrestling a couple of years ago. More recently, however, the two SmackDown superstars have been battling each other in singles competition on WWE’s Thursday night show Superstars. Just a few days after Barreta picked up a victory over Hawkins on last week’s edition of Superstars (and only a few hours before the two would take part in a pre-WrestleMania lumberjack match between Sheamus and Daniel Bryan that eventually turned into a battle royal won by the Great Khali), Hawkins and Barreta put their differences aside long enough to sign autographs at WrestleMania Axxess. They also took a moment to talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture about their post-WrestleMania future.

Curt Hawkins, you got your start with WWE in the Atlanta area at Deep South Wrestling. What’s it like being back in Atlanta for WrestleMania?

Hawkins: It’s kind of bizarre. It’s like full circle. I’ve come through before and I used to live here, but to be here for a week is cool. It’s even more bizarre that Bill DeMott, who was the trainer and head coach for Deep South, just recently came back on board for Tough Enough. So it’s really cool.

Barreta takes down Hawkins. (Photo courtesy WWE)

You were in Deep South Wrestling with a lot of people, including current WWE Champion the Miz, who are now on the WWE roster. How does it feel to be part of that group of people who have all gone on to bigger things with WWE?

Hawkins: It’s a shame that Deep South folded. I don’t think it gets the credit it deserves. A lot of stars were produced out of there. Luke Gallows was a big part of that and there’s tons of other guys. I think just because it was only around for two years that it doesn’t get the credit it deserves, because it produced a lot of stars and began a lot of careers.

At the WrestleMania Art Auction, we saw a piece of art that you did of Shawn Michaels flying through the air. He’s obviously had a big influence on you. What are your thoughts on him going into the Hall of Fame?

Hawkins: The reason Trent and I both are here is because we grew up watching him and he absolutely captivated us. He’s the reason we both became wrestlers, he was the inspiration. He’s my favorite wrestler of all time and it meant a lot for me to be there to see him get inducted. I made sure I was going to be there and I had goosebumps.

Barreta: I think he’s the best of all time. Nobody even comes close to him. Pretty much everything Curt said I agree with and to be there was unreal.

Hawkins: We used to live together in Tampa when were training in FCW and we pretty much watched his matches all day long.

Barreta: Even now, when I watch matches I pretty much only watch old Shawn stuff. He’s always good.

Trent Barreta photo courtesy WWE

Neither of you is officially involved in WrestleMania. What are you plans post-WrestleMania?

Hawkins: We’ve been busting our butts on Superstars trying to get noticed. So we’re just trying to get things moving and maybe not just do them on Superstars anymore. I think people are starting to notice and see how hard we’re working.

Interview by Jonathan Williams and Jason Von Stein

 

Former WWE Divas Champion Alicia Fox looks to regain that title after WrestleMania

Photo courtesy WWE

Although it’s been a few months since we’ve really seen much from her, World Wrestling Entertainment‘s Alicia Fox still sees herself as a force to be reckoned with in the divas division. It was only a few months ago that Fox (the only black female on WWE’s roster) pinned Maryse at Fatal 4-Way to dethrone Eve as the Divas Champion. After holding the title for almost two months, Fox lost it to a returning Melina. After her rookie Maxine was the second elimination in the third season of NXT, Fox unsuccessfully challenged Melina to a rematch for the Divas title last September. Shortly before the start of WrestleMania XXVII, WPC caught up with Fox at WrestleMania Axxess.

Photo courtesy WWE

As one of the current era of WWE divas, what are your thoughts on Sunny being inducted into the Hall of Fame?

I’m really grateful that she was even created because, like she said, Alicia Fox wouldn’t be here without her. I’m very honored and it makes me feel like I might be able to be inducted into the Hall of Fame one day. It makes all us new era divas feel like that’s an opportunity we can accomplish.

You’re from Jacksonville, which isn’t that far from Atlanta. What is it like for you having WrestleMania taking place not only in Atlanta for the first time, but also being in the South so close to where you’re from?

I feel very much at home. It’s almost like an accomplishment to myself, kind of like WrestleMania’s in my old stomping grounds. I feel like I’ve grown since day one.

Since you don’t have a match at WrestleMania, what will you be doing during the show?

I’m going to be looking for error and critiquing very hard. I’m going to be doing nothing but judging every piece of that divas’ match because I’m so jealous. I’d love to be showing my stuff to Atlanta, I really would. All of us divas would. We all really want to bring it. But we bring it to Axxess, so, same thing.

Less than a year ago you were the Divas Champion. What are your plans post-WrestleMania to get back in the title hunt?

I definitely would like to be crowned Divas Champion again, if not one time, like, ten or eleven. I would like to be a ten-time Divas Champion some day, and be inducted into the Hall of Fame.

Interview by Jonathan Williams and Jason Von Stein

WPC and Creative Loafing recap WrestleMania festivites in Atlanta

WPC and Creative Loafing were at all the WrestleMania events in Atlanta last week. Here are photo galleries from the WWE Hall of Fame induction ceremony on April 2 and WrestleMania on April 3, with text by WPC’s Jonathan Williams.

Photo by Elizabeth Wilson/Creative Loafing

http://clatl.com/atlanta/wwe-hall-of-fame/Slideshow?oid=3030516

Photo by Alan Friedman/Creative Loafing

http://clatl.com/atlanta/wrestlemania-xxvii/Slideshow?oid=3030414

Photo by Alan Friedman/Creative Loafing

WrestleReunion brings legends like “Cowboy” Bob Orton and Bruno Sammartino to Atlanta on WrestleMania Sunday

Here are links to my preview of this Sunday’s WrestleReunion in Atlanta, as well as interviews with “Cowboy” Bob Orton and Bruno Sammartino. I’ve also included a little bit of the Sammartino interview that didn’t make it into Creative Loafing‘s wrestling guide.

http://clatl.com/atlanta/wrestlereunion/Event?oid=3004466

http://clatl.com/atlanta/wrestlereunion-bob-orton-casts-a-legacy/Content?oid=3010321

http://clatl.com/atlanta/wrestlereunion-bruno-sammartino-reminisces/Content?oid=3010323
Do you see any wrestling promotions today that are more in keeping with the type of wrestling you were part of?

No, it doesn’t exist. Unfortunately all the new promotions try to copy WWE. When I heard that TNA was coming up and going to be different, I watched it one time. I never watch wrestling on TV anymore, but I watched TNA because I wanted to see how different they were. But I didn’t see any difference, I really didn’t. I think the mentality is that the way it’s supposed to be today and when new promotions come up they don’t get the wrestling of yesteryear. It’s an era gone by and this is now. But I don’t understand that because when they try the arenas they’re not successful. Even WWE, which is the biggest organization, of course, we’re lucky here in Pittsburgh if they come here twice a year. Madison Square Garden maybe twice a year, but it’s always for Raw or one of the TV shows. And even with that, they paper a lot of it, so they can’t get a legitimate, genuine sellout. Everybody says how much bigger it’s gotten and, in some ways, yes, because they have merchandise, which we never had, and pay-per-view events, which we never had, and they go to as many as 125 countries television-wise, which, of course, we didn’t. But what we did do, we had local TV shows in different cities and we’d draw the crowds at the arenas. The people would come out and go out of their way to buy a ticket and come into the arena. That’s the way wrestling belonged. And besides that, they say some guys make more money now than ever. Very, very true, but the problem is that in my day we had what they called territories, therefore you had a lot of different promotions throughout the United States and Canada and they all employed a pretty good number of wrestlers. When Vince McMahon, with the help of Dick Ebersol from NBC, came and said they could go anywhere and became so powerful, they were in opposition of everybody and drove all the other promoters out of business. Then McMahon himself couldn’t sustain those territories because people didn’t buy that kind of wrestling. As a result, what do you have? You no longer have any territories to speak of and therefore all those wrestlers that used to wrestle for all those different organizations are out of work. The only wrestlers employed are those that WWE can use, or some in TNA. Overall, there are a lot of wrestlers that could be making a living at it that are no longer there.

Cody Rhodes returns to his home state for WrestleMania XXVII

Photo courtesy WWE

In the interview WPC did with Cody Rhodes for Creative Loafing‘s wrestling guide, he talked about his WrestleMania XXVII match against Rey Mysterio and what it was like being he child of an Atlanta wrestling legend. Below is the link to that interview followed by a few more words about being the son of “The American Dream” Dusty Rhodes.

http://clatl.com/atlanta/wwe-cody-rhodes-vows-to-unmask-rey-mysterio/Content?oid=3001733

Your father obviously has a lot of history in Atlanta, home of WrestleMania XXVII. What was it like growing up here where your dad has always been such a big star?

Photo courtesy WWE

I wouldn’t have been a Georgia boy and grown up near Atlanta had wrestling not been a massive part of Atlanta. When I moved here, my dad was the executive producer at World Championship Wrestling and before that Jim Crockett Promotions. That’s why so many veteran superstars and talents from the past still live in the area because of the fallout when such a massive company with such massive roots was here. For WrestleMania to be in Atlanta, formerly a place that was taboo for WWE to come to, it’s further proof that when they say World Wrestling Entertainment it truly is the world. On a personal note, it’s great to be in a city that my dad was such a prominent entertainer in and getting the chance to sing my own tune and be on the same marquee he was.