The Morning Call (Sunday)

Cage plays self, finds laughs in empty action-movie plot

- By Michael Phillips Michael Phillips is a Tribune critic. mjphillips@chicagotri­bune. com Twitter @phillipstr­ibune

Now 58, with nearly

100 film credits since he was “Brad’s bud” in “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” in 1982, Nicolas Cage has handled a lion’s share of money grabs in a career distinguis­hed by a gratifying number of movies worth seeing, often just for him. Good material, bad material, big-budget studio clangers, low-budget indies on wry: The man does not coast.

The central gag in the occasional­ly funny action-comedy “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent” imagines Cage, playing a variation on himself named Nick Cage at a career impasse.

Divorced, with a tenuous relationsh­ip with a (fictional) teenage daughter played by Lily Mo Sheen, the movie’s version of Cage has run up a $600,000 tab at a fancy Los Angeles hotel and needs a job. His agent, Fink (Neil Patrick Harris), comes through with a prospect: For a cool, gallingly easy million, his client is to attend a superrich Cage fan’s birthday party on the island of Mallorca, Spain. There Cage will be the special guest star, required only to small-talk about his career, get some sun and sweat his future.

Jovial, star-struck Javi, the Cage fanatic played by a movie-improving Pedro Pascal, has been identified by CIA operatives played by Tiffany Haddish and Ike Barinholtz as an internatio­nal gunrunning murderer in a known family of criminals. Cage becomes a double agent of sorts, helping out the American intelligen­ce experts while getting to know his host, who happens also to have an idea for a Cage screenplay. You could get a good, brash lark out of that premise. “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent” is roughly 38% good, and not brash or satiric enough. The bits that got me laughing had nothing to do with the increasing­ly dominant action-thriller machinery. My favorite is a sidewindin­g minute or two with Nick and Javi, tripping on LSD, sitting on a bench staring, paranoid, at people eating ice cream. It’s a familiar setup: drug-fueled panic leads to a ridiculous outcome. But watching Cage and Pascal play off each other is a treat.

Co-written (with Kevin Etten) and directed by sophomore feature filmmaker Tom Gormican, “Unbearable Weight” name-checks like a maniac, dropping one-liners about Cage’s nutty resume (“Con Air” and “Guarding Tess”) while having the boy-men played by Cage and Pascal discuss the action-movie compromise­s they’ll have to make in the screenplay they’re writing. That joke feels like an apology for the film; self-referentia­lity without a twist is just settling for less. Comedies need the courage of their conviction­s, and the guts to forego anything that doesn’t add to the fun.

Through it all, Cage gives his all, which hardly needed saying. He takes on two roles, plus a cameo, playing “himself ”; a pushy, digitally de-aged ’90s version of himself, named “Nicky”; and a peppy, aged Italian crime boss with terrible fashion sense. Cage never stops trying things, whether its eccentric physical details or idiosyncra­tically timed punchlines. He has no interest in breaking his no-laziness streak, especially in his own little “Being John Malkovich.” I suspect the Cage fans who will enjoy this movie won’t care if it’s fundamenta­lly sloppy and lazy moviemakin­g. The star of the show is neither.

MPAA rating: R (for language throughout, some sexual references, drug use and violence)

Running time: 1:47

How to watch: In theaters

 ?? KATALIN VERMES/LIONSGATE ?? Nicolas Cage plays a desperate variation on his real-life self in Tom Gormican’s “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent.”
KATALIN VERMES/LIONSGATE Nicolas Cage plays a desperate variation on his real-life self in Tom Gormican’s “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent.”

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