Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson has replied to a "f***ed up" question about the shape of his abs.
According to The New York Post, the 49-year-old WWE legend teamed up with A Quiet Place star Emily Blunt to answer questions in a video from WIRED to promote their latest movie, Disney's ungle Cruise.
During the Q&A, Blunt and Johnson answered some of the most searched questions on the internet about each other.
Take a look at the interview in the video below:It was all fun and games until The Rock got to a question about his body, which we all know he works pretty dang hard to maintain.
The question that got the Fast and the Furious alum riled up was: "What's wrong with The Rock's abs?" - which Blunt first joked was written as: "What is the deal with The Rock's … flabby tummy?"
At first, The Rock seemed so caught off-guard by the question to even respond properly, exclaiming: "That's so f***ed up!"
"That is f***ed up, who wrote that," Blunt responded in her own disbelief.
However, flashing his trademark smile, Johnson was able to answer the question about the shape of his abs sincerely and admitted that the reason he has a "five-and-a-half-pack" is the result of a devastating injury he sustained in 2013 during a match against John Cena at WrestleMania.
The Rock stated: "I tore in a wrestling match. I tore the top of my quad off my pelvis [...] in a wrestling match. And what that did, that caused a chain reaction, and that tore my abdominal wall.
"So then I had to do a triple hernia emergency surgery of a tear, a tear, and a tear. So they're not, like, perfect abs."
Indeed, The Rock has been training even harder than usual lately in preparation for his upcoming role of Black Adam in the eponymous superhero movie.
Johnson spilled the details of one of his recent workouts in a recent post shared with his 259 million followers on the platform, stating: "Late night training. Big week for #BlackAdam shooting my 'champion' scenes with my shirt off and showing my body.
"Been working extremely hard dieting, training, and conditioning unlike any other role of my entire career. Manipulating water, sodium, cardio but also having to push and pull real iron to have dense, dry, detailed muscle."