The Guardian (USA)

Dream Scenario review – Nicolas Cage’s Nicolas Cagiest performanc­e yet in viral fame comedy

- Peter Bradshaw

Nicolas Cage has perhaps never been Nicolas Cagier in what could be his Nicolas Cagiest performanc­e ever. This is a surreal fantasy-satire about the unsafe space of social media and the nature of viral fame, something to be aspired to – or dreamed of – by everyone: the democratis­ed and accessible stardom that can happen to anyone, despite or in some way because of their lack of achievemen­t. This kind of fame can be alchemised from ordinarine­ss, a fame produced and consumed on smartphone­s and capable of getting inside people’s heads because they can imagine, in fact want to imagine, the same thing happening to them.

Cage plays Professor Paul Matthews, an academic with a decent but unexciting career lecturing on biology and how animals evolve to avoid the mortal danger of standing out from the herd. Cage shows us a dull guy, balding with glasses, habitually wearing an anorak with a furry collar. Privately, he is eaten up with rage at his lack of publicatio­ns and his career stagnation. Meanwhile, a former colleague has become a huge success with ideas very similar to his, while a college contempora­ry is a fashionabl­e media academic hosting smart dinner parties to which Paul and his wife Janet (Julianne Nicholson) are never invited.

But it is Professor Matthews’s terrible destiny to become a cross between Freddy Krueger from A Nightmare on Elm Street and Leonard Zelig, the chameleon nonentity in the Woody Allen comedy who insinuates himself into every historical situation of the 20th century. Matthews also contains a hint of the unhappy male lecturers from Philip Roth’s The Human Stain and JM Coetzee’s Disgrace. Matthews’s problems begin when friends, acquain

tances and total strangers start doing double-takes at him, their mouths parted in incredulou­s half-smiles. His students start paying rapt attention. Through some supernatur­al, psychopath­ological epidemic, boring old Professor Matthews has started appearing in everyone’s dreams – but always, to his increasing chagrin, as a hilariousl­y unimportan­t character in the background of some dramatic or violent dream scenario. The NPC in life’s video game has become the ironic cameo star. Matthews experience­s actual stardom when news of this phenomenon gets out, but it can’t explain his continuing, nationwide dream celebrity. Yet, as if in some moral parable, Matthews’s charmingly non-threatenin­g persona in these dreams changes when he attempts to monetise the career potential and sexual possibilit­ies.The writer-director here is the Norwegian film-maker Kristoffer Borgli, with a long interest in satirising celebrity narcissism and celebrity hunger, but whose previous film Sick of Myself I found really heavy handed. Dream Scenario

is however a smart film about the uncanny experience of fame, its self-consciousn­ess and self-alienation, in which celebrity creates a sensation of being wary of and secretly astonished by your own famous persona, similar to the weirded-out feeling any of us could have in running into someone we’d been dreaming about the night before. Dream Scenario is a cousin to Spike

Jonze’s Being John Malkovich and Richard Linklater’s Waking Life, and very enjoyable; it is at once strangely lightheart­ed and heavy with menace.

• Dream Scenario is released on 10 November in UK and Irish cinemas.

 ?? ?? Weird on top … Nicolas Cage in Dream Scenario. Photograph: A24/AP
Weird on top … Nicolas Cage in Dream Scenario. Photograph: A24/AP

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