Here, The Rock tackles Jason Statham, because Hollywood solely exists to settle "Who would win?" barroom debates. After they beat each other up and throw each other through multiple pieces of glass, The Rock gets blown out of a window and lands on the top of a car with someone else on top of him. For this, The Rock gets a cast on his arm, a cast that he later literally flexes his way out of when he needs to join the final action scene of the movie. We're going to only focus on that first part though, as I'm sure that the cast part is scientifically accurate. Honestly, I don't even think that doctors can make casts that big, anyway.

What would actually happen:

Cristian: OK, first off, glass is not that easy to break. In fact, it's designed not to break. And even when you actively plan to break through glass, you'll occasionally get a stubborn pane of glass that just doesn't want to. For example, during the WWE King of the Ring 2001 match in which Kurt Angle met a few particularly headstrong pieces of glass and had his back turned into a charcuterie plate.

Also, despite the fact that The Rock's body is significantly less squishy than that of most human's, that concussive blast still would've hurt most of his squishy bits, namely the ones most vulnerable to injury like the eardrums, eyeballs, and respiratory, digestive, and circulatory systems. Then there's a bunch of flying items and shrapnel to deal with. AND THEN there are the tertiary effects, which happen when a person is propelled by the blast into other objects which result in lots of blunt force, or lacerating injuries.

AND FINALLY there are the quaternary injuries that include burns (obviously a problem considering the fireball), crushing (a lady landed on top of him), closed and open brain injury, asphyxia, and toxic exposures. So we can pretty safely assume that when Fast Rock got crushed, he'd probably at least be temporarily blind, deaf, burned, bleeding, full of shrapnel and with a great big, Rock-sized deuce in his pants.