Monday, March 6, 2017

Nic November Ghost Rider and Adaptation

Nic November Ghost Rider and Adaptation



Here we are, back with some Nicolas Cage movies. I think Ive already come to realise that the majority of his films arent that bad - but then again, I am mixing the good with the bad: last week with Gone in 60 Seconds and the considerably better Lord of War, and this week with the awful Ghost Rider and the brilliant Adaptation. We can still have faith in good old Nicolas!


The Hairstyle: Get Me in a Boy Band/The Intense Ginger

I think that Nic should stay away from films that have him spending prolonged amounts of time in/on a vehicle. Gone in 60 Seconds was terrible. Ghost Rider was even worse. Basically, Nic is Johnny Blaze, a stunt man who likes to ride his motorcycle in dangerous ways and everyone resents him for it but he does it anyway. Oh, and he sold his soul to the devil. Mhm.

Honestly, I think I checked out of this film from the first five minutes. It is all well and good that Johnny sold his soul to the devil. But when he runs around on fire, it just isnt that exciting. No one seemed terribly fussed about him running around on fire. I wasnt terribly fussed that he was running around on fire. It just struck me as a little incredibly weird, because...IDK, he was on fire. It just didnt make sense to me. But then again, Im not sure that this movie was striving for sense.

Something that also didnt make sense to me was the relationship between Johnny and Roxanne (Eva Mendes). Sure, they were little childhood sweethearts. Then they got torn apart. And then they came across each other again. Johnny creepily checks up on her, they fall in love, and then she is doomed to become the ragdoll thrown around by all of the bad guys (one of whom is Wes Bentley, which was also weird). It just shows how immensely lazy and eventless the movie is. Just like this review. Life imitates art...or whatever.


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The Hairstyle: The Fuzzy Jersey

Another example (and a far better example) or life imitating art lies in Adaptation. which brought Nic his second Oscar nomination. The film is a strange little project, as it is an autobiographical film written by Charlie Kaufman, based on his struggle to adapt Susan Orleans book The Orchid Thief into a film. Nic stars as both Charlie and his fictitious twin brother Donald - who was also credited with writing the film and became the first fictitious person to be nominated for an Academy Award. This movie is about as strange as they come from the outset, but when your watching it, everything seems perfectly normal. Including dear old Nicolas Cage.

This is probably Nics best performance - and his performance in Leaving Las Vegas was pretty damn good. I think that he succeeds so well here because he is given a slightly crazy script, which means he doesnt have to really go out of his way to unleash every crazy bone in his body. He is somewhat restrained, and somewhat normal. Never once was I thinking "oh, here I am watching Nicolas Cage in a Nicolas Cage movie" - which is usually the biggest problem I have with his films. Hes just wonderful, even when theres two of him.

The film itself was fantastic, especially for all of its strangeness (again, it is the premise that is strange, not the film), and the cast. Also featuring Meryl Streep, Chris Cooper (in a role which won him an Oscar), Tilda Swinton, Cara Seymour (who looked insanely like Carey Mulligan in this film - no wonder they cast Cara to play Careys mother in An Education), Brian Coz and small appearances from Maggie Gyllenhaal and Judy Greer, this is one heck of a film, which is really the full shebang: funny, depressing, dark, light. Oh, to have the brain of Charlie Kaufmans...

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What do you think of these films, and how do they rank on the Cage Rage scale for you?

Available link for download