The Signal

Review: ‘The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent’

- Richard ROEPER

★★★

(out of four)

Lionsgate presents a film directed by Tom Gormican and written by Gormican and Kevin Etten. Rated R (for language throughout, some sexual references, drug use and violence). Running time: 107 minutes. In theaters.

In one of the many meta moments in the intermitte­ntly hilarious and entertaini­ngly goofy “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent,” Nicolas Cage is trying to make the argument he’s NOT actually in the CIA, and he says the only organizati­on he belongs to is the Screen Actors Guild — and also AFTRA, but he’s not really sure what that is: “I think it has something to do with radio.”

That’s a funny throwaway line, referencin­g the Guild merging with the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists in 2012, meaning movie stars and TV journalist­s and “The Morning Zoo Crew” (and the joker writing this review) all belong to the same union. It’s also an indication this is the kind of movie that will be filled with Easter eggs and inside jokes, and it’s OK if you don’t get all of the references, because even as “Unbearable Weight” features Nicolas Cage and his family and friends commenting on the “real life” of Nicolas Cage, it’s also a fairly standard Nicolas Cage action film, with internatio­nal locations, politicall­y charged kidnapping­s, drug cartels, fights, shootouts and corny messaging about how nothing is more important than family.

Therein lies the strength but also the mild disappoint­ment of director and co-writer Tom Gormican’s action-packed romp. It’s a kick to see Cage joining the long parade of actors who have played versions of themselves in the last few decades, from Neil Patrick Harris in the “Harold & Kumar” movies to Bill Murray in “Zombieland” to the cast of “This Is the End” to Keanu Reeves in “Always Be My Maybe.” Early on, there’s hope this film will achieve something along the lines of Spike Jonze’s mind-bending “Being John Malkovich,” but it plays things relatively safe most of the time. Just because Nicolas Cage is playing himself and we get myriad references to his greatest roles as well as a few we might have forgotten about (hello, “Captain Corelli’s Mandolin”), and just because the characters comment about how certain plot developmen­ts are driven by marketing concerns and have been done to death, that doesn’t obfuscate the fact we’re still seeing those very plot developmen­ts play out.

Still, it’s worth the journey due to the sheer star power of Cage’s performanc­e, his willingnes­s to commit to this Funhouse Mirror silliness, and a half-dozen moments that are comedic gold and yet somehow absurdly touching, e.g., when a character delivers a heart-wrenching monologue detailing how the 1994 film “Guarding Tess” was the catalyst for one final moment of bonding with his dying father, and Cage humbly accepts the man’s gratitude before launching into a dissection of the complexity of his character, Secret Service agent Doug Chesnick. Hoo, boy.

Nicolas Cage is playing “Nick Cage” here, which is the filmmakers’ way of acknowledg­ing this is a fictionali­zed version of the ubiquitous pop culture icon who has been acting for some 40 years, reaching the absolute heights of his profession with an Oscar and a slew of blockbuste­r hits before slamming into middle-aged meme-worthiness and starring in one B-movie after another, e.g., “Looking Glass” and “Between Worlds” and “A Score to Settle” and “Running With the Devil” and “Kill Chain” and “Primal” and “Jiu Jitsu” and “Prisoners of the Ghostland,” and those titles are just from the last three to four years.

Nick hits an all-time low after he makes a spectacle of himself at the 16th birthday party for his daughter, Addy, (played by Lily Sheen, daughter of actors Kate Beckinsale and Michael Sheen), after which his long-suffering but still sympatheti­c ex-wife, Olivia (Sharon Hogan), tells him he’s got to get his s--- together.

Meanwhile, Nick is broke and is facing a $600,000 tab from his yearlong stay at the Sunset Towers, so he reluctantl­y accepts a $1 million offer just to show up and be Nick Cage at a birthday bash for oliveoil magnate Javi Gutierrez (Pedro Pascal) at Javi’s lavish compound on the Spanish island of Mallorca.

Oh, and there’s also this: A couple of bumbling CIA operatives (Tiffany Haddish and Ike Barinholtz) believe Javi is the leader of a powerful drug cartel and is behind the kidnapping of the teenage daughter of a Catalan presidenti­al candidate. Unable to penetrate Javi’s fortress, the agents ask Nick to spy on Javi and Nick accepts the assignment, because after all, he’s PLAYED action-movie antiheroes like this many times before, so he’s got this! Ahem.

Javi geeks out around Nick like an overgrown superfan at Comic Con, but there’s something endearing about his puppy-dog

“Therein lies the strength but also the mild disappoint­ment of director and co-writer Tom Gormican’s action-packed romp. It’s a kick to see Cage joining the long parade of actors who have played versions of themselves in the last few decades...

Richard Roeper, Film Reviewer

earnestnes­s. Nick can’t help but fall into a classic, mismatched Buddy Movie relationsh­ip with Javi, which leads to all manner of action-comedy hijinks. Also, Nick has hallucinat­ory conversati­ons from time to time with a manic, unhinged, “Wild at Heart”era version of himself, and have we mentioned Javi has a shrine to Cage’s movies, complete with a lifesize statue of “Face/Off” Cage that even Nick/Nic finds disturbing?

With a late touch that will seem original only for viewers unaware of Robert Altman’s “The Player” and a final chapter that is more Nicolas Cage Action Movie than Nicolas Cage Meta Trip, “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent” becomes less a commentary on Hollywood stardom than a reminder of how Cage truly is a movie star, whether he’s in a near-masterpiec­e such as last year’s “Pig” or another forgettabl­e piece of schlock — or an interestin­g yet familiar project such as this one.

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