I find this post to be insulting toward the craft of acting. Training to be a good actor takes years of study and practice. Good directors, and budgets, can often go a long way to making amateur actors look better than they are--but for your lead in a show you need to choose somebody who can act first.
I consider myself an actor at heart, and spent years studying and practicing theater, and the simple truth is that certain people are naturally far more talented than others at "the craft"; otherwise, there would be no such thing as great performances by child actors without prior experience. Moreover, I bet any experienced theater director (and I know one who does) is able to cite instances of performers without prior formal training sweeping competitors for
certain particular roles, even leading ones, right off the stage. Granted, naturally talented/charismatic untrained thespians might not have the biggest dramatic
ranges straight out the gate, but portraying roles in one's natural wheelhouse simply doesn't require the same time and work investment as martial arts, dancing, or musical instrument-playing in the vast majority of individuals. In this case, the task of playing a callow, ignorant twenty-something man is far from beyond the reach of many males of the appropriate age. We're not talking Shakespearean stage, Broadway musical, or improv acting here. Acting talent, like Life Itself, is complex and sometimes terribly unfair.
I'm not saying the series shouldn't have chosen an experienced actor over a martial artist. But the critical consensus is that, given the choice they made, Jones didn't have nearly enough training prep, athletic talent, or both, to produce satisfying results.
Neither does four months. In a TV show or film, unless someone comes to the role an expert, no one cast will become an expert during preproduction or filming.
Sure, but just about zero martial arts laymen viewers or professional reviewers of
The Matrix complained about the stars' fight choreography - much the opposite, in fact. The proof is in the pudding, etc.
And now I've said all I have to say on the matter.
Then I trust you've enjoyed the alarm and indignation, especially from yourself, my modest thoughts have provoked. In any case, I aim to please.
