We know that Nicolas Cage does not do one dimensional when bringing his characters to life on the screen. Deivering nuance and ambiguity to the roles he plays is a particualr talent of his. Villains are conflicted, victims of circumstance, have good hearts but have lost their way, make good in the end or maybe not; heroes find themselves in moral dilemmas, or get pulled or tempted into darker scenarios and don’t fulfill the archetype. Cage can elicit sympathy for a character in the midst of a despicable act, or have you wanting the hero to do the wrong thing in order to do what is right, he often plays against the stereotype and stretches the walls of the box, sometimes smashes it wide open, not only in terms of interpretation but in style.
In short, Nic Cage characters are often intriguing, conflicted and ambiguous figures, layered and multidimensional, never black and white, but shades, and when speaking at the recent Trespass Press Conference at Toronto International Film Festival, Cage himself hinted that his portrayal of a diamond dealer in upcoming Joel Schumacher Trespass is going to be no exception.
Kyle Miller is husband to Sarah (Nicole Kidman) and Father to Avery (Liana Liberato) in a materialistically successful family, but a family filled with intrigue and deceptions, all of which play into an intense home invasion hostage scenario around which the film is centered.
In a recent press conference at the Toronto International Film Festival, Cage revealed more about his character:
“Voice is one of the tools of film acting. Any chance I can get to play with it, I’m going to jump on. I wanted Kyle Miller to be somebody that would, in your mind, be the last person that could rise against this untenable situation he finds himself and his family in. So one of the ways to do that was to make the voice just a little bit [different.] I say that he’s sexually confused. He’s someone that you wouldn’t expect to defend himself and his family in that situation, so I wanted to play with that.
I wanted to show that someone that speaks in a way that might be fragile could still surprise you, could still be tough, could still take unexpected chances and risks. The only way I wanted to confirm that idea is I added a little line where I said to Ben Mendelsohn’s character, “I’m worth more dead than alive.” What that means is he’s not afraid to die. If you can take me out, maybe I can solve all this for my family because I am worth more dead than I alive. So that was another way to demonstrate that he was not afraid.
I like counterpoint. I think of acting as music. Any kind of new sound with a voice, any kind of surprise I can give you, any kind of surprise I can give you, any counterpoint I can give you to keep you guessing is what I’m going to go for.
I wanted to show that he is the last person that you might think could be tough in those circumstances but he is. Not that being feminine doesn’t mean you can’t be tough. That’s the point, that you can be tough. So I’m trying to break down stereotypes and I guess archetypes and play a character that is surprising.”
Check out the whole press conference below:
Check out the Trailer and this intense clip to see Nicolas Cage in action in Trespass!
We can’t wait to see Nic in this role in Trespass, which opens 14 October in the US, and anticipate that this film will be as gripping, scary and compelling as 8MM, his last collaboration with Joel Schumacher.
Are you looking forward to this movie?
Can you think of other Nicolas Cage roles where he has played ambiguous or conflicted characters?
That was cool, Lula, a good description of Nic and his characterizations. It certainly should stir the interest of those who are reading about the movie and are looking for information about it.
I am of course, very excited! I have been checking to see if it was being released theatrically in my area, but can find no mention so far. I am looking forward with great interest to it, especially after hearing what Nic has had to say at his TIFF appearances and seeing the clips.
I suppose Terence from Bad Lieutenant jumps to my mind as a conflicted character role for Nic, also ambiguous, since one is never completely sure about his motivations and the ending of the movie contributes to that uncertainty. Joe from Bangkok Dangerous is another one. But really, could anyone have been more conflicted than David from The Weather Man, painfully so.
Thanks Lady Trueheart I was looking for a character based angle, for I believe Nic is a Character Actor, who very meticulous in bringing his characters to life from the inside out, in a way that is unique and makes his characters so compelling.
Great list of conflicted and ambiguous characters there ! Terence is probably the most extreme example i can think of, our sympathies are pushed to the limit as his actions spiral into more and more debauchery...yet Nic manages to straddle that line masterfully.
Neither the word 'conflicted' or 'ambiguous' cover exactly what I am attempting to get at though...think of a character like Peter Loew from Vampire's Kiss, he encapsulates so many levels (extemes and shades in between too) simultaneously, and that radiates outwards though the whole film into the audience.
Sailor in Wild At Heart.... H.I from Raising Arizona too.
Thinking of his Action Heros, they are never straightforwardly heroes..Cameron Poe 'save[s] the f***ing day' but even his halo is somewhat tarnished when he kicks the crap out of someone at the beginning of the movie. Stanley Goodspeed in The Rock drives a volvo, a biege one, is the ultimate geek, does not know how to handle his gun, throws up at the thought of danger (these are all entirely human in my eyes, but are not regular action hero characteristics) and yet he saves the day too. Face off is the ultimate headf*** for switching darkness and light good and evil.
I am jumping all over here but something like Red Rock West..the man who faces an endless series of moral dilemmas, constantly pulled into some tempting scenario...same as in Trapped In Paradise..the wallet..the bank job..
8MM... Tom Welles is pulled over the line into the darkness he sets out to uncover and expose
Kick Ass...in reality a father trying his young daughter up to be a killing machine is despicably unforgiveable, yet we sympathise with his motive because of his history and becase of his adoration for his daughter...
Even those characters who are supernaturally on the side of the light Nic adds a little darknes to them..Seth in Ciy Of Angels, Balthazar "I can read Minds" Blake in Sorcerer's Apprentice...
Milton...a ghost from hell....he is a baaaaad man but he selflessly undertakes a perilous journey, and in the end is the hero who rescues his granddaughter....
Your right, Lula. His character always have so many levels. He looks always deeper into his characters. Because, nobody his only bad or only good. We as humans have a light and a dark side.So it isn`t that easy to play a role that is only bad or evil. You can always change bad things into something good. That is, what, I think, he tries to show us with those "Bad Ass" Characters. And I love to see him develope his characters on these different levels. And he adds always so much more to it.
__________________
"When you think about magic, it is imagination plus willpower focused in such a way that you can create a conscious effect in the material world..."