Rosamund Pike thought Doom could’ve ended her career and called it one of the worst movies ever made
Doom and Gloom
It seems like fans of the game Doom, general audiences and even the people involved with the production of the 2005 film were woefully unsatisfied with the final product. Even Dwayne Johnson would roast himself after the movie bombed in a bit of self-deprecation. And this is a man who stood by Black Adam as a game-changing film in the former DCEU. The consensus is that, despite the movie turning out to be disappointing, it would sport a pretty fun sequence that was a loving tribute to the game’s signature first-person shooter presentation. Karl Urban would be the one to partake in the scene, right before he and Johnson have a mano-e-mano fight scene (which was kind of fun).
Rosamund Pike’s regret
Doom would score Rosamund Pike hot off her Bond Girl turn in the last of the Pierce Brosnan James Bond film, Die Another Day. Variety reports (through The Independent) that Pike would reminisce about what she considers a big blotch in her career while she appeared on the How to Fail with Elizabeth Day podcast. She would explain,
When I was making Pride & Prejudice and I was having great fun in my cornfields in my bonnet, I get a call to be in an action franchise. They were making a cinema version, a narrative version of the video game Doom. And I think in my bonnet, in my field of hay bales, ‘Yeah, I can do anything. I can jump on this hay bale in my crinoline, so I can certainly go and kill some zombies on Mars.’”
She continued,
So suddenly I’m in this film with the Rock, and I realize how utterly ill-equipped I am to be an action star. [There were] macho guys. There were weights on the set. Every time a gun was brought out, it was kind of like a holy relic for the Doom fans. I was just out of my comfort zone, out of my league, out of my depth.”
Then, she concluded,
It was an absolute bomb. I mean, I probably could have ended my career. It was just probably one of the worst films ever made. I mean, it was a catastrophe. I don’t read the reviews, but you get the sense like you’re lucky to have survived that one.”
Pike on her Doom ignorance
This isn’t the first time Pike has been transparent about her feelings on this film. Years ago, she also shared the blame when talking to Collider about the video game adaptation. She expounded, “I think I failed just through ignorance and innocence to understand, to fully get a picture of what Doom meant to fans at that point. I wasn’t a gamer. I didn’t understand. If I knew what I know now, I would have dived right into all of that and got fully immersed in it like I do now. And I just didn’t understand. I feel embarrassed, really. I feel embarrassed that I was sort of ignorant of what it meant and I didn’t know how to go about finding out because the internet wasn’t the place it is now for the fans to speak up. I wouldn’t have known where to find them. I do now! In fact, I now have many friends who were massive fans of the game and I just wish I had known them then.”
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