The Unbearable Weight Of Massive Talent is a wonderfully funny, lighthearted homage to film ā and not just the ones starring Nicolas Cage.
It took a letter to convince Nicolas Cage to star in
The Unbearable Weight Of Massive Talent ā a film in which the actor plays himself. After rejecting the role several times, co-writer and director Tom Gormican sent the letter to explain his intentions and his vision for what the film would be. Cage has said that he was finally convinced by Gormicanās clear affection for his early filmography, which continues to this day to be somewhat divisive. But Cage was absolutely right. The comedy isnāt a parody of the actorās work, itās a cleverly written homage to all of his roles, and to cinema in general. Itās also extremely, extremely funny.
When his debts rack up, the jobs dry up, and his relationship with his daughter reaches breaking point, Cage accepts an unconventional job offer from his agent (Neil Patrick Harris). Heāll be paid one million dollars to attend the birthday party of wealthy mega-fan Javi Gutierrez (Pedro Pascal, who matches and sometimes even exceeds the performance of Cage). Things take an unexpected turn when a couple of CIA agents (Tiffany Haddish and Ike Barinholtz) inform him that Javi is really a dangerous crime lord holding a presidentās daughter hostage, and recruit him as a spy.
The Nick Cage weāre presented with at the start of the film is a down and out actor whoās desperate for work, drinks too much, and hallucinates a younger, zany version of himself that pops up to give unsolicited life advice. Itās a smartly-written depiction of the actor. Itās a fictionalised version of Nicolas Cage based upon the real-life public perception of him as a star ā including the eccentricities, the debt, the fact that heās always working, and references to his āshamanic ability as a thespianā. But itās always clearly separated from the real Cage, not least through his fictional family ā estranged wife Olivia (Sharon Horgan) and daughter Addy (Lily Mo Sheen).
From the very opening moments,
Massive Talent is packed full of references to Cageās filmography. It starts, rather spectacularly, with the closing scene of
Con Air, as a woman watches, transfixed. Thatās the first in a long line of callbacks to various films. A less intelligently written movie would use this as an excuse to parody the Nicolas Cage works that are often considered ālesserā. But this doesnāt do that. It treats all films, regardless of genre or perceived quality, as equal. Itās a work in which
Face/Off and
The Rock are treated the same, and referenced as much, as
Leaving Las Vegas or
Captain Corelliās Mandolin.
Thereās an interest here in all of Cageās filmography, be it the silly or the serious. It also makes reference to and shows a love of wider cinema. I donāt think anyone has expressed their affection for both
The Cabinet Of Dr Caligari and
Paddington 2 in the same film before, but itās something movie fans will find really endearing.

But
Massive Talent isnāt an exercise in pointing at the screen in recognition, Leonardo Di Caprio style. Itās an incredibly fun buddy comedy fuelled by the awesome rapport between Cage and Pascal. Pascal is especially good, giving possibly his best performance. As a Nick Cage super fan, his portrayal of Javi is just a ray of light in an already joyful film. Heās essentially playing the biggest Nicolas Cage fanboy, and heās so earnest and believable I wouldnāt be surprised if he was a real-life fan.
As two huge film nerds, the antics they get up to together invariably end up involving recreating classic and clichéd set pieces. Their hilarious recreations of scenes from the paranoid thriller or action movie may come across as parody, but itās clearly being done with the utmost love and respect for the genres theyāre playing on. The same goes for Nickās sudden introduction to the role of super-spy. It plays flawlessly on the conventions, even though the character doesnāt have a clue what heās doing.
Cage is truly at the top of his game at the moment, and the range needed to play this version of himself in
Massive Talent proves it. Heās got the chops for comedy, action, pretty much any genre you throw at him. He gives an incredibly outlandish performance as the younger Nicky, going all out to evoke the super-dramatic performances he gave in his early career. Nicky could easily become an overplayed and tiresome character, but he shows up only when really necessary. Gormican shows some good restraint in knowing when those moments are needed.
Thatās one of the most refreshing and wonderful things about this film. In the wrong hands, it could have become the
Scary Movie of Nicolas Cage films. But instead of mocking his early filmography and the conventions of the action-comedy, itās instead a lighthearted homage to all things cinema.
Massive Talent is a film made by, about, and for people who just love films ā ones starring Nick Cage or otherwise (though loving Nick Cage certainly helps). I havenāt laughed so much at such a fun, uplifting film in a long, long time.
The Unbearable Weight Of Massive Talent in in UK cinemas from 22nd April.
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