BETTER TO BE META
Nicolas Cage is in on the Nicolas Cage jokes
Thirty-two years ago, Nicolas Cage swaggered onto the set of a British talk show to promote his movie Wild At Heart. After performing a handspring and several kung fu-style moves, he whipped off his T-shirt, thrust it at the startled host, and put his leather jacket back on over his naked chest before proceeding with the interview. “I’m just going to have a blast!” he declared. Fans who appreciated that version of Cage — the one who seems eager at any moment to set fire to something — will be excited to hear that he resurrects it in his latest movie The Unbearable Weight Of Massive Talent. In the film, now in Thai cinemas, he plays Nick Cage, a debt-ridden, emotionally tortured version of his contemporary self, but he also plays Nicky Cage, an obnoxious, de-age-ified replica of his old self.
The movie begins as the current-day Cage, washed up and embittered, accepts a US$1 million deal to travel to Majorca to appear at the birthday party of a rich superfan named Javi (Pedro Pascal) who might be a drug kingpin. Javi wants Cage to collaborate on a movie and do drugs with him; the CIA wants Cage to infiltrate what it believes is Javi’s narcotics ring and help rescue the kidnapped daughter of a Spanish politician. Cage mostly wants to drink and lie at the bottom of the pool. The movie is a metacommentary on filmmaking, on the passage of time and on the actor himself as his past and present selves argue about who he really is.
It was Cage’s idea to base Nicky Cage on the person he was during that long-ago TV appearance.
“At the time, I thought it was funny and embarrassing and arrogant,” he said in an interview this month.
We were sitting in an empty suite at the Park Lane hotel in New York. Cage had flown in from New Orleans and was coasting along on a few hours’ sleep. “I certainly wouldn’t do anything like that again,” he said of his antics in 1990.
There are lots of things he wouldn’t do anymore, he said, now that he is 58; now that he has won an Academy Award (for Leaving Las Vegas, in 1996); now that he has made more than 100 movies; now that he has had five wives and two children, with a third on the way; now that he knows how he feels about himself and his career.
One of the things he regrets, for instance, was his method-acting decision to consume a live cockroach while filming the 1988 movie Vampire’s Kiss.
“I still feel bad for the cockroach,” he said. “I can’t help it. You start trying to figure out what’s going on in their heads.” The Cage of today is measured, courteous, thoughtful and discursive.
Although he often wears bright and shiny or interestingly textured jackets in exotic fabrics, for the interview, Cage was dressed soberly, in a plain grey suit. He has a deadpan conversational style and an instantly identifiable nasal drawl, but if you close your eyes and listen for a while, you realise that he sometimes sounds like Owen Wilson.
‘‘This is an opportunity to take the narrative and play with it on the canvas of a film
The idea of getting Cage to play himself in a film about himself came from the director Tom Gormican. Cage repeatedly rejected the premise until Gormican wrote him a letter outlining his vision.
“He needed to understand what our intentions were,” Gormican said, “that we were trying to make this a celebration of his career.”
Gormican also pitched the film as a way for Cage to seize control of his own off-therails reputation, one fuelled by an explosion of YouTube compilations showing the actor going full Cage in various movies. (The compilations have titles such as Nicolas Cage Freak-Out Montage.)
“If your identity is litigated in public 24 hours a day with social media, then this is an opportunity to take the narrative and play with it on the canvas of a film, as a piece of performance art,” Gormican said.
Cage-o-philes will find in the film plenty of inside jokes — homages to Face/Off, Leaving Las Vegas and even to the classic meme-ified “Not the bees!” scene from The Wicker Man. But the movie’s characters also address head-on questions such as whether Cage has diluted his appeal by appearing in too many movies, or whether his characters yell too much, or whether some of his recent work is so self-referential of his earlier work as to approach parody.
“When you’re writing those scenes, they’re funny, and when you give them to Nick, you’re very nervous,” said Gormican, who wrote the script with Kevin Etten. “It’s a tremendously vulnerable thing, to talk about past financial problems or where you are careerwise.”
Cage, who has finally settled his debts and paid off the IRS, resists the notion that he has ever taken a role for cynical purposes or worked at a level that was less than 100%. That is not a universally held view. Left Behind (2014), for instance, drew a 0% Tomatometer rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
“Looking distractingly rubbery with a helmet of fake, dark hair, he seems to have been Photoshopped into the film,” RogerEbert.com’s Christy Lemire wrote of Cage’s performance.
Cage acknowledged that not everything worked but said that every film he did always had at least one scene or one element that he could feel proud of.
“I want to go on record with something,” he said. “Whatever this perception or aura that the internet or certain critical bodies in the media may have taken, there is an actual fact, in my opinion. Whatever I had to do to get out of debt, I did it with the same level of commitment I always had.”
He continued: “I stand by the work, and if in this movie there were sendups of it, like, ‘What happened to you?,’ the fact is that I was able to play ‘Nick Cage’ the way I did because I never stopped working. I kept practising and honing. I feel closer to my muse and my instrument now than I ever have.”
In a running joke in the movie, people keep telling Cage that “he’s back”. He always responds: “Not that I went anywhere.” © 2022