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Nicolas Cage: a life in film
To celebrate the release of his latest movie, 'Knowing', Time Out takes a look at the enduring box office appeal of Nicolas Cage
Ever since his very earliest appearances in showy art-house claptrap ‘Rumble Fish’ and the dayglo mallrat opera ‘Valley Girl’, Nicolas Cage has never gone back on an overtly implied vow to remain nothing less than committed, experimental and occasionally loopy, both in terms of performance and in his ever more eccentric choice of projects.Yet despite the lack of traditional matinee idol looks, an often tangential approach to the script at hand and that schizoidal selection process, Cage has somehow parlayed his ‘bipolar hipster doofus’ persona into big, big box office and become far more than his questionable parts. But how did this funny-looking, gangly fellow end up facing off against John Travolta in groovy, big budget shootouts while careers of his peers withered, stagnated or went horribly wrong (Rob Lowe, we’re looking at you)?
Gilded Cage
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| ‘Is this wrong?’ 'Peggy Sue…' |
Born into the sprawling Coppola clan, Nicolas admirably changed his name early doors to avoid charges of nepotism. Since his entry into the biz coincided with Uncle Francis’s commercial meltdown, it’s uncertain whether he need have bothered, but it did at least announce that Cage was his own man. His turn as the high-handed Smokey in ‘Rumble Fish (1983) is notable in retrospect solely for its sobriety, but as the unpredictable Randy in vacuous teen pap ‘Valley Girl’ (also 1983) clues started to emerge as to his eventual peculiarities. Electing to have two teeth pulled to assist his portrayal of an injured Vietnam War vet in Alan Parker’s solid but grossly manipulative ‘Birdy’ (1984) suggested the boy was taking it all a bit too seriously. He was already all over the dial, but somehow harmonised his strange frequencies for baby-boomer time-travel romance ‘Peggy Sue Got Married’ (’86), delivering a deft comic performance of bridled lunacy.
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| 'Raising Arizona' |
Raising Cain
1987 found him essaying wooden-handed New York baker Ronny Cammareri in Oscar-baiting Cher vehicle ‘Moonstruck’ and the cosmically inclined sneak-thief HI McDunnough in the Coen brothers’ peerless ode to trailer-park contentment, the family unit and turbocharged yodelling, ‘Raising Arizona’. In the former he looked put-upon and uncomfortable, in the latter he looked put-upon and so at home that they could have redirected his mail. It was a sign that during the early stages of his career, the big lunk put the weird before the wedge.
Weird on Top
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| Van Dyke parks - 'Zandalee' |
‘I Am Normal!’
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| I’m with stupid - 'Trapped In Paradise' |
Gongs and Geld
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| In the drink - 'Leaving Las Vegas' |
A frank and captivating meditation on bitter acceptance versus sweet rejection, ‘Leaving Las Vegas’ (1995) sees Cage as a terminal alcoholic flirting with redemption and serves as a dramatic companion piece to ‘Raising Arizona’, in that it is a film that would have almost certainly failed without his presence. With the Oscar in his back pocket, Cage did what every self-respecting award-winner does and immediately cashed-in on critical kudos by signing on for a series of bonecrushing blockbusters. Luckily, however, he was canny enough to star in some of the most cleverly framed and well-put together actioners of recent times with ‘The Rock’ (1996), ‘Con Air’ and ‘Face/Off’ (both 1997). While the suspicion lingers that he was promoted to action-hero status simply because a vacancy came up and no one else was around, he made a fine fist of all three. He over-egged this particular brand of mustard with ‘Gone In Sixty Seconds’ (1999), but by then he’d taken his eye off the ball in favour of crepuscular guff like ‘Bringing Out the Dead’ and ‘8mm’ (both 1999). He’d done the weird stuff, bagged the Oscar and made a fortune; time to turn to pastures new.
Try Anything!
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| ‘Shuddupayaface!’ 'Captain Corelli's Mandolin' |
A National Treasure
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| Bow-hunting skills - 'The Weather Man' |
With the sub-Shyamalan sudoku-based puzzler ‘Knowing’ currently fugging up our silver screens, we can only hope that Cage takes the golden opportunity to let it all hang out offered by ‘Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans’ later this year. It may well be his last chance to remind those of us who still care that – even in the gonzo company of director Werner Herzog and co-stars Val Kilmer and Brad Dourif –nobody does crazy quite like Cage.
Author: Adam Lee Davies
User comments on this story
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- Mike G said...
- I was originally going to lament the omission of 'Amos and Andrew', not a great film but one I much enjoyed in those simpler and perhaps more enjoyable days of Cage's early career, but didn't. However, I see from today's headlines that the tale has come true - the black Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates was arrested for breaking into his own home, and - just like Sam Jackson - allegedly not making it easier for himself. Posted on Jul 22 2009 08:09
- Report as inappropriate
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- Fiercehairdo said...
- How could you miss out Adaptation?? Surely one of the best Cage outings in the recent past amidst a sea of forgettable nonsense. Posted on Mar 31 2009 13:19
- Report as inappropriate
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