It was entertaining when Hugh Jackman punched Dolph Ziggler in the face. Not so entertaining was the recent 'sequel' segment in which Jackman and Ziggler mocked the beleaguered Damien Sandow, dressed head-to-toe in a $20 Magneto costume that would not have looked out of place in a children's fancy dress party. Nope, that segment was s**t. It wasn't that Jackman and Ziggler lacked commitment the second time round. It wasn't that Jackman lacked the in-ring charisma some of the previous Guest Stars of Raw have. Nope, that segment failed because being an entertaining character inside a professional wrestling ring is a very difficult balance to ascertain, especially when dealt with material as poor as that. Jackman, a world-renowned actor and a moderately talented one at that, displayed the loose, more regular charisma of a man used to a camera 5-inches from his face and an assortment of gaffers, assistant directors and cinematographers around him ready to pull him up whenever it might go wrong. Stepping into a pro-wrestling ring and attempting to connect with the live crowd AND those through the screen at home is a tricky task that some of the best in-ring performers in the history of the business have failed to perfect. Chris Benoit, before he topped his wife and son, was an example of a man who never quite got this balance right. Put simply, being a performer in a WWE ring and being an actor in television and film are two radically separate, gestating beasts of different breeds. Never more evident than in Jackman's struggles during that recent RAW segment, the inverse is equally true- when pro-wresters decide to pull a Michael Jordan and step from their comfort zone, shouting loudly through a microphone with over-the-top gestures, to the quiet, super-focused intensity of acting in TV and film. Over the years, scores of professional wrestlers have tried their hands at acting in a mainstream capacity- to varying levels of success and to a vastly differing level of critical acclaim. However, truthfully, if you remove a certain half-black, half-Samoan mountain of a man whom raises an eyebrow from the equation, the ventures of wrestlers into actors have almost exclusively resulted in either radical failures, from which the said wrestler would (wisely) return to his bread and butter or trivial side projects that did little other than pass their time whilst they were on leave from the squared circle. Here's 10 of the most prominent wrestlers whom tried their hand in acting, only to shimmy swiftly (and sometimes shamefully) back to the laced-up-boots and turnbuckle pads of the ring...