John Cena showed off his sculpted muscles in a clinging T-shirt on the set of his upcoming Fast And Furious sequel in Los Angeles on Friday.
The 45-year-old beefcake, who has parlayed his wrestling stardom into a movie career, is shooting the upcoming 10th film in the long-running series.
Now called Fast X, the movie also stars Clint Eastwood‘s heartthrob son Scott, 36, who was spotted with John on the set.
Looking fab: John Cena showed off his sculpted muscles in a clinging T-shirt on the set of his upcoming Fast And Furious film in Los Angeles on Friday
Sizzling sensation: Now called Fast X, the movie also stars Clint Eastwood’s heartthrob son Scott, 36, who was spotted with John on the set
John slipped into a color-block T-shirt that tightened around his pronounced pecs and allowed him to flaunt his musclebound arms.
The sizzling showbiz legacy was decked out in a midnight blue suit over a fitted black polo-shirt, accessorizing with a pair of green shades.
Scott and John feature amid a top-flight cast including returning franchise players Vin Diesel and Charlize Theron as well as newcomers Jason Momoa and Brie Larson.
Hard at work: John slipped into a color-block T-shirt that tightened around his pronounced pecs and allowed him to flaunt his musclebound arms
The look: The sizzling showbiz legacy was decked out in a midnight blue suit over a fitted black polo-shirt, accessorizing with a pair of green shades
Filming on Friday and Saturday was scheduled for the Los Angeles neighborhood of Angeleno Heights, where Vin Diesel’s character in the movies lives.
However protestors in the neighborhood gathered in the street Friday to express their objections to the film for glamorizing street racing, Deadline reports.
Some fans of the franchise have evidently gone to the neighborhood and engaged in unsafe car maneuvers such as donuts or burnouts.
The organizations Street Racing Kills and Streets Are For Everyone put the protests together after people in the neighborhood got in contact with them.
Meanwhile: Scott, looking dashing as ever, could be seen playing a scene with a character in full military gear who towered over him
Not pictured: Scott and John feature amid a top-flight cast including returning franchise players Vin Diesel and Charlize Theron as well as newcomers Jason Momoa and Brie Larson
One Angeleno Heights resident called street racing ‘super, super, super dangerous’ this Friday and showed a car crash photo to the protestors.
‘Are we going to wait for this to happen to one of our neighbors, our children, before somebody cries out for action to take place, or are we going to do it before it happens?’ she said while addressing the crowd.
Other protestors, carrying pictures of people who died in accidents connected to the issue, marched and yelled: ‘Street racing kills.’
Wow: The gun-toting character cut an imposing figure while stalking the set in costume
Details: Filming on Friday and Saturday was scheduled for the Los Angeles neighborhood of Angeleno Heights, where Vin Diesel’s character in the movies lives
The franchise cast has not escaped political controversy either. Last year John made an apology video to the Chinese public in Mandarin for calling Taiwan a country.
At the time, the ninth Fast And Furious movie was out in theaters in China, where it bowed over a month before its US release.
F9: The Fast Saga made $135 million on its opening weekend in China, according to Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post.
It became the first US film to crack $100 million its first weekend in China since the pre-COVID Avengers: Endgame, the second-highest-grossing movie of all time.
Opposition: However protestors in the neighborhood gathered in the street Friday to express their objections to the film for glamorizing street racing, Deadline reports
Traces: Some fans of the franchise have evidently gone to the neighborhood and engaged in unsafe car maneuvers such as donuts or burnouts
Rearview: The franchise cast has not escaped political controversy. Last year John made an apology video to the Chinese public in Mandarin for calling Taiwan a country