Famed as much for his eccentricity as his movie roles, Anne Billson takes a look at some of Nicolas Cage's more bizarre moments.
"Have you ever seen anybody do anything like this before?" asks Nicolas Cage in The Frozen Ground, a serial killer thriller based on a real-life case. Cage fans are already scouring the trailer for hints of nuttiness, but he seems to be playing it low-key, for once. We're talking about an actor who can't even be upstaged by special effects that turn his head into a skull on fire in Ghost Rider and Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance. This is a performer who soars so regularly over the top he is celebrated online by a compilation called Nicolas Cage Losing His S--t.
He didn't lose it in the seminal 1982 teen movie Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982) which launched several careers (including those of Sean Penn and Jennifer Jason Leigh) but not that of young Nicolas Coppola, as he was then billed in a blink-and-you'll-miss-it role. The nephew of Francis Coppola, he swapped his famous surname for that of Marvel superhero Luke Cage and gave what remains his sweetest, most likeable performance in the 1983 rom-com Valley Girl, before snagging roles in Uncle Francis's Rumble Fish and The Cotton Club.
I met him in 1985, while he was doing publicity for Birdy. Rumours he'd had four teeth pulled for his role as a Vietnam veteran with severe facial injuries turned out to be true. "They were baby teeth," he told me, "so I took advantage of it and had them out. I thought it would add an interesting dimension to the role." He also astonished cast and crew by spending five weeks, both on and off set, with his head completely wrapped in bandages. "The reactions on the street were brutal," Cage told me. "Men and women laughing, kids staring. And when I took the bandages off, my skin was all infected because of acne and ingrowing hairs." He seemed to me like a nice young man. Also, a bit of a nut.
Stories of Cage eccentricity began to circulate. He was almost fired from the romantic lead in his uncle's time-travel comedy Peggy Sue Got Married because he insisted on talking like the claymation horse from The Gumby Show. His burgeoning craziness slotted comfortably into the Coen brothers' live-action cartoon Raising Arizona, and lent much-needed edge to the slushy Moonstruck (1987) - "The slicer chewed off my hand!" - but then he was outdoing himself as a New York executive who thinks he's turning into a vampire in Vampire's Kiss (1988), for which he ate a live c***roach. "Every muscle in my body didn't want to do it. But I did it anyway."
There was the Elvis phase that persisted through Wild at Heart, Honeymoon in Vegas, and marriage to Lisa Marie Presley, the singer's daughter. He was relatively low-key in the 1993 neo-noir Red Rock West but made up for it in his brother Christopher's conman caper Deadfall with a poppers-snorting performance so manic it set the benchmark by which all subsequent Cage performances have had to be judged. Vern, my favourite online critic, dubbed it "mega-acting".
In the space of one year (1995), Cage was not just winning an Oscar for his performance as an alcoholic screenwriter drinking himself to death in Leaving Las Vegas, but also scuppering David Caruso's stab at big-screen stardom. Who remembers Caruso's bland hero in Kiss of Death (1995) when Cage was playing a sociopath who bench-presses strippers and has a phobia about metal cutlery?
Since then it has been mega-acting a-go-go, often incorporating silly accents (cod-Italian in Captain Corelli's Mandolin, fake-English in National Treasure 2: Book of Secrets) and demented hair. "Sometimes people think I'm wearing a wig when I'm not wearing a wig, and then sometimes they think I'm not wearing a wig when I am wearing a wig," he told screenjunkies.com. Cast opposite a comparable ham - John Malkovich in Con Air, John Travolta in Face/Off - he seems almost moderate, but his presence on the side of the good guys is a useful guarantee that evil won't be hogging the spotlight, not while he's there to deliver lines like, "Put the bunny back in the box!" Spike Jonze's Adaptation went for broke by casting him opposite himself in the dual roles of twin brothers apparently vying with the other for the saddest hair in screen history.
At certain points over the past decade Cage has owned 15 personal residences (including castles in Germany and England), nine Rolls-Royces and the skull of a Tarbosaurus; these spending sprees and some not entirely unconnected tax problems and lawsuits have required him to step up his output. If you ever get the feeling he's in every other film you see, welcome to the club - and maybe take a look at the rather disturbing blog Nic Cage As Everyone.
Some say he's not choosy enough about his films, but it's a miracle the quality of his performances has remained as high as it is. His acting in recent generic thrillers like Trespass or Seeking Justice may, unsurprisingly, seem tired, but the tiredness can play nicely into the character, adding unexpectedly subtle shadings to the obsessive avenger in Kick-Ass, or the centuries-old magus in The Sorcerer's Apprentice. Now, I reckon, would be the perfect time for him to play Dracula.
Cage's mega-acting can be a marvellous thing to behold: the bug-eyes, the yelling, the Mick Jagger poses, the Oscar-winning lugubriousness. Sometimes the results are hilarious, as in the "Not the bees! Not the bees! AAAAAAGGGGHHH!" of Neil LaBute's ill-advised remake of The Wicker Man. But The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call - New Orleans (another, more successful remake) was directed by Werner Herzog, who has past form with over-the-top actors - he made five films with Klaus Kinski - and Cage's performance as the corrupt, crackheaded yet oddly sympathetic Detective Terence McDonagh shows he still has surprises up his sleeve. In the words of McDonagh, "Shoot him again - his soul's still dancing."
That`s a really good article! And, Nic as Dracula? Well, who knows? Would be an outstandNIC and brilliant performance, for sure!I would love to see it! Great find! Thanks for posting it, Lady T.!
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