Dwayne Johnson wants to do something different with the sequel to his Fast & Furious spinoff movie Hobbs & Shaw.

"When it comes to Hobbs and Shaw, which we loved and loved making that movie, there's an idea that I had that I called [Universal Pictures chairwoman] Donna Langley, called our writer Chris Morgan, our producer Hiram Garcia, and I said, 'I have this idea and this direction for [Hobbs and Shaw 2],'" Johnson told SiriusXM. "And I pitched, and it would be, without giving it away... it would be the antithesis of what Fast & Furious movies generally are in that they continue to go on and go on and go on."

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"In this case, I wanted to and still want to do the quintessential Hobbs movie that, again without giving it away, that you watch a man walk off into the sunset... I said, 'We have an opportunity here to go against the grain and let's disrupt things a little bit and let's create a movie within the Fast & Furious world that is unexpected,'" Johnson added.

Johnson made his debut as the Luke Hobbs character in 2011's Fast Five, serving as the film's de facto antagonist before ultimately teaming up with Dominic Toretto and his Fast family to take down the drug lord Hernan Reyes. The Rock reprised the role for the next three main Fast & Furious movies before starring in 2019's Hobbs & Shaw, pairing his no-nonsense U.S. government agent with Jason Statham's ex-special forces agent-turned mercenary Deckard Shaw on a mission to -- what else -- save the world.

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While neither as well-received nor lucrative as certain other Fast & Furious movies, Hobbs & Shaw was still a clear success, earning decent reviews and grossing $760 million at the box office. Because of this, Johnson said Hobbs & Shaw 2 has what he called the "Moses Effect" -- the ability to clear other projects the actor is developing out of the way and take top priority. However, before it can happen, Morgan has to finish penning Red One, an original winter holiday-themed starring vehicle for Johnson that reunites him with his Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle and The Next Level director Jake Kasdan.

Johnson's next movie, the action/comedy Red Notice, begins streaming Nov. 12 on Netflix.

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Source: YouTube