The Daily - Nicolas Cage Made Himself a Legend. Then He Had to Live With It.
Episode Date: May 23, 2026The iconic actor on his thrillingly risky choices, on screen and off, and becoming a meme. Thoughts? Email us at theinterview@nytimes.com Watch our show on YouTube: youtube.com/@TheInterviewPodcas...t For transcripts and more, visit: nytimes.com/theinterview Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From the New York Times, this is the interview. I'm David Marquesi.
I'm just going to lay my cards out on the table.
I think Nicholas Cage is a truly special artist and the most original and unique actor since Marlon Brando.
It's not just that he's capable of delivering beautifully naturalistic performances,
like in Leaving Las Vegas, for which he won a best actor, Oscar,
or that he's jumped between romantic comedies like Moonstruck, action movies like The Rock,
and unclassifiable films like adaptation,
it's that he brings a postmodern,
highly imaginative,
and thrillingly risky approach to all of it.
That style, which has led to his work
frequently being memed on social media,
also pulls from other films, music, and painting.
And I think it takes acting far beyond realism
or even, frankly, traditional judgments of good or bad.
The same devotion to originality
shows up in his off-screen life too.
Cage, whom I previously interviewed back in 2019,
it's a bona fide eccentric.
His idiosyncratic interests,
lavish spending habits,
and all-around free-spirited nature
are in their own way as legendary
as his highly distinct performances.
To what else can I say?
Other than that, there's no one like him.
The latest evidence is the new series Spider-Noirre,
which viewers can watch in either color or black and white.
The show is Cage's first big story,
swing at television. In it, he plays Ben Riley, a hard-boiled private investigator in 1930s, New York,
who in a very Cage-in mashup, also happens to be a web-slinging superhero.
Here's my conversation with the great Nicholas Cage.
Nick, thank you for taking the time to speak with me. I appreciate it.
Thanks, David. Thanks for having me back. I enjoyed our last conversation seven years ago in
Nevada. We'll pick up where we left off. Okay.
which I don't remember.
But where I wanted to start,
I just watched the speech you gave to graduates at Cal State Fullerton.
This is probably something like 25 years ago.
Going way back.
And in that speech, you said,
artists have the license to go straight up the devil's ass,
smile at him,
and survive.
When have you done that?
Uh,
um,
I felt like I did it on Bad Lieutenant with Werner Herzog.
And Werner was an influence on that particular speech
because I remember he said,
if you don't have the money to make the movie,
you have to steal the camera and you have to steal the film and make the movie.
Do it any way you can.
You've got to make the movie.
And I think it was saying something about passion,
about the passion of facing the odds to get to the truth of what it is you hope to express as an artist.
Sometimes you have to be willing to, within reason, allow your instrument, your psyche, your imagination,
to go to very uncomfortable and dark corners of your memory or of your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, your, you.
thoughts in order to convey a truth in a scene that is perhaps disturbing or dangerous in nature
so that it doesn't feel phony. I'm not saying go out and do something dangerous, but I'm saying
sometimes you have to allow your psyche, if you will, to embrace that dark corner of your mind.
And I think that's partially what I was talking about in that speech about, as you see,
reiterate it go up the devil's ass. It's not always a fun process to go there, to go back
in that dark corner of your mind or that memory, or even look around you at current events
and a newspaper to get to that place where you feel the emotion and you feel the grief
or you feel the anger so that you don't feel like you're faking it. Have you ever done what you just
described, sort of used the world outside, sort of looked at current events to motivate the
Certainly. I remember specifically on a little movie I made called Joe.
Joe, yeah, David Gordon Green, yeah.
And I was having trouble getting to that feeling of intense anger.
And without mentioning names, I recalled a newspaper article I read about a little boy who was at the zoo.
And he fell into a, well, like, a case.
or an environment of wild painted dogs, the African painted dogs, and they ate the child alive.
And I remember getting very upset about it, how could something like that happen?
And so in that scene, I was upset that this child that I was sort of mentoring or guiding
was the victim of domestic abuse and of his sister was potentially going to be abducted for other
disturbing and horrible things, atrocities.
And so I went and looked at that current event at that time,
and then it got me there.
So that would be an example.
You know, it's interesting when actors talk about
the psychological or emotional risks of performance.
They often talk about it in the context of darker emotions.
Does it feel risky or difficult to get to the more positive emotions?
So that's a really perfect question.
And if I wake up in the morning to use a cliché on the wrong side of the bed,
and I have to be funny, funny, funny, and happy, happy, and dance, dance, and this and this bright and sparkling and poppy, that is more difficult.
That is much more challenging.
Well, how do you get there?
You become a specialist in compartmentalizing.
Okay, that I'm not going to think about what was said to me an hour ago.
I am going to shut that off and act from the spinal cord and be happy and turn it on.
And that's not easy.
You know, also in that Cal State Fullerton speech, something you said that really stuck with me is you talked about a way.
willingness to invite negative reaction to the work, a willingness to be despised or have someone
not like the work. And you said something along the lines of when somebody has a negative reaction
like that, they're not BSing. Like it's a genuine reaction. And that's something that you're
striving for. And I think about that a lot, actually. Like if you're only doing something that people
like all the time or only have positive reactions to, it's possible you're not taking them on an
exciting of enough ride. But it does take some courage to be willing to be despised or laughed at or
misunderstood. And I wanted to know for you, if you have a memory of when you realized that you were
willing to elicit that kind of reaction, or maybe even were drawn to that kind of reaction.
I think it was on Peggy Sue Got Married, which everyone knows was a movie that I did not really want to
partake in. And I found a way and the powers that be said, okay, to play the part in a way that I thought
would be interesting to me, which was to use this voice that was not considered very attractive
and to change my appearance in such a way where it almost became like a cartoon or like a dream
cartoon. I knew full well that that was not going to go over very well, but at the same time,
it's what kept me interested. I knew that I was taking an enormous risk, but it was so exciting
every day I went to work. And I was just saying in my mind, I'm going to do this. I'm going to
stick to it. I'm going to stick to it. And everyone else around me is like, stop, stop, stop.
and I just kept going.
And I'm very happy with that performance for me.
And I think in time, it's matured in a way that's actually quite wonderful.
And I'm glad I did it.
But in the process, it was, I knew I was going to invite a lot of negative commentary.
But then after Peggy Sue got married, you did other performances
where you were taking things to places
that were probably likely going to be misunderstood.
Was that a result of liking what you had done
on Peggy Sue Got Married personally?
Like that you did, yeah.
It was a personal choice of mine
that I was carving something
that I wanted to bring to life
and have it shine in that way.
Francis Bacon famously said in his book
The Brutality of Fact
that it's impossible to record anything as a fact
without causing some injury to the image.
So I was actively looking for, at times, the grotesque,
like a bacon painting, vampires kiss.
Even raising Arizona, I was challenging Joel and Ethan
because I was sticking to my plan
that he was going to, H.I. McDonough was going to have this kind of Woody Woodpecker,
Looney Tunes style, which they originally liked,
but there were days where they were frustrated.
And we're like, why did I, why did, you know, I could have cast this person and I could
have cast that person.
And then I finally just said, well, why did you hire me?
And that stopped that conversation.
And the results on that, I think, are terrific.
I think that that was a great union.
Joel, Ethan, and myself and Holly, I think we got somewhere together that was remarkably
funny.
But at the time, it was right on the edge.
And then Vampires Kiss, of course, I mean, I was really.
struggling on that one because I had a very specific vision of what I wanted. I wanted to bring
a Mac-Shrek-like style back into the sort of 80s, yuppie, this is before American Psycho,
attitude of like the literary agent who's going to the best restaurants and he's going on dates
and then slowly devolving into a vampire and thinking he is a vampire.
And that I wanted to bring out the Shrek-like behavior,
and I did the horrible thing that I don't need to go back to with the ingestion of that thing.
Cockroach.
Yeah.
Well, all that was me trying to make a big noise to say,
we're going to do this.
We're going to do something different.
But some of those performances that you just mentioned bring to mind a question.
I had that's going to be a little in the weeds for most people other than you, me, and
Nicholas Cage fans. But I'm going to do it anyway. So I think one of the innovative things
that you brought to acting was almost a kind of, sort of like a postmodern, almost metatextual
element to it, where you would take elements from genres that were outside of film and performance
and sort of outside of the character you were trying to play
and import them into what you were doing.
So I'll give examples.
I remember when I spoke to you last time,
I asked you about this scream that you gave in a movie called Rage,
and you explained that you were trying to emulate
some sort of stockhausen sonic effect with that.
Or in face-off, there's a moment
where your character sort of goes up behind a schoolgirl
and your face raises up
and you're giving a Francis Bacon-style look to the camera.
Or in Mandy,
there's a scene, I think your character is in a car,
and you look quickly at the camera,
and the camera zooms into a close-up, like a Bruce Lee movie.
And there's any number of other examples,
like the Woody Woodpecker, Raising Arizona.
I could keep going.
But are there similar examples of you doing that kind of technique
that you haven't seen remarked on?
Like, when have you done that and people have not noticed?
Well, I don't know if they've known the specifics that went into the choices in terms of what you're calling metatechual.
I would call the art synthesis concept that I was dabbling in where I could pull from other art forms and have them inform my performance.
And I like to take from places, whether it's in film performance, like you mentioned Bruce Lee, or whether it's in graphic art or any other art, stockhousing.
We were talking about Poonke and Stiemong, I think.
In this case, and I will let, you know, I did it again.
I felt that the Wild at Heart performance was Warholian, not Stanislovsky, Warholian,
and that Warhol would take these icons and do these marvelous collages with them.
I thought, well, why not do that with film performance?
And David Lynch being David Lynch, the great American surrealist, was really up for that.
Which brings me to Spider-Noire.
So we'll circle.
I can get there now or I can circle back.
Go for it.
Just go where you were going.
Well, so Duchamp's shovel started this idea, I think, in pop art of taking a utilitarian tool and isolating it and we could regard it as fine art.
And then you had Warhol doing that with the soup cans.
And then I looked at all that.
And then I looked at Liechtenstein.
And Liechtenstein utilized the or, or.
or embraced a mass utility in the comic strip
and broke it down all the way to the little printing press dots that you see
from the printing press, and he threw it into a still life.
And they became a kind of serrat pointillism,
but it was a Liechtenstein taking irreverence and reverence in a comic graphic
and making it fine art and almost being irreverent about fine art,
while doing it. So what am I doing with Noir, or Spider-Noire, is I'm taking the reverence I have
for the actors that I cherish like Bogart or Cagnar, Edward E. Robinson or Peter Lorry from those
old movies. And I'm taking the mass utility of the television, or the tube, if you will,
and I'm trying to mash that reverence I have up with a pop icon, a Marvel.
icon in Spider-Man, if you will, and make a collision in such a way that I'm taking
television, which is a mass tool that many people imbib on and ingest. And I'm saying,
look at this, so that maybe the hope is that a young person in their teens would go,
oh, wow, what is that? That's black and white. I'm not too familiar with black and white.
I can watch it in color, but I can also watch it in black and white. What is black and white?
Oh, my gosh, there's this immense volume of beautiful art that all these early actors were in.
Let me check that out.
Let's go look at that.
And, oh, and by the way, he's Spider-Man.
So it's like this boom, this crazy Liechtenstein collision.
So that is metatechial or my art synthesis concept again.
Now, the fact that Amy Pascal at Sony, Jen Salkey at Amazon,
Oro New Zeal and Stephen Lightfoot, let me?
I'm still amazed by.
So when you're in meetings about doing a project like Spider-Nois,
do you explain the Liechtenstein stuff?
No, I don't.
I'll keep that under my fast.
I didn't break out the Liechtenstein in those meetings.
I can do it with you because we can talk the same language sometimes.
But, for example, with Jen, Salky at Amazon, I went over to her house.
We all sat there, all the powers of B were there.
And I just said, you know, it doesn't matter if a 13-year-old doesn't know who Humphrey Bogart is.
The point is it works.
It works.
I know it works.
And I remember thinking, a calling, Jen, saying, you don't have to only do it in black and white.
You can also do it in color.
And then they can hopscotch back and check it out in black and white.
And then, lo and behold, maybe they'll.
want to see the big sleep or Maltese falcon.
You know, I had zero interest in watching the color version.
Thank you.
Well, I think folks like us, real film enthusiasts, will go with the black and white.
But I'm hoping that the 13-year-olds, a 15-year-old, whomever, will see the color and go,
well, let me try the black and white.
What were they?
And I think they will.
I mean, there's a real, are we doing spoilers in this interview?
Well, it's fine with me.
You're the one who has to decide.
I mean, I really wanted to see a version of a Spider-Man that was grappling with the arachnid DNA that was flowing through his bloodstream and having to retrain himself as to how to be human.
I have a couple more questions about acting, but before I do, there's something I was curious about related to spiders.
I know you've had a lot of exotic pets.
Have you had a spider?
Oh, sure.
Sure, I've had spiders, so tarantulas.
Well, I even learned a little bit about the movement of spiders, and I put that in the script.
Spiders don't have muscles.
Their appendages are like straws.
They shoot fluid, so the fluid is making their appendages move, which is fascinating to me.
It's like a party whistle.
All that went into the script.
There is a spider that I found fascinating,
which is listed as one of the more intelligent animals.
And it's called the Portia spider.
And this spider is so intelligent.
It literally knows what bug likes which tune on his web.
So he knows what to play to get the fly,
and he knows what to play to get the grasshopper,
and that's really something that exists.
I thought that was fascinating.
This is slightly related.
There was a Reddit asking me anything.
You did a couple years back.
Right.
And someone asked you about,
I think I don't even remember what the question was,
but the subject of praying mantises came up.
And you said something like,
don't get me started on praying mantises.
Why not?
Well, I think it was the same,
movie we had talked about
years ago
with that great line
I never had a career only work
the
Hammer horror film
A Million Miles to Earth or something
What not a million
miles of Earth? Quatermass
in the pit. That's it.
Whoa, you have a good memory.
Holy moly. You remember that? Yeah.
That's something you mentioned in passing
seven years ago. Those aliens in that
looked like praying mantises, and it flipped me out. I was very impressionable as a child,
which brings me to another reason why I'm glad that I managed to finally do a season of television
because I think even before I discovered James Dean and Brando, I was all about my television,
the Zenith Oval Television in my living room. And I wanted to get inside that TV because the
people, those little people in that TV were far more interesting to me than the people in my living room.
And I think that was my earliest memory of wanting to be an actor.
It was people like Bill Bixby and Peter Falk and Rock Hudson and McMillan and wife and Dennis Weaver and McLeod.
And I loved anything by Rod Serling.
So the television, and it's amazing, it's only happened now, was largely responsible for me wanting to become an actor at the earliest age.
age, like three, four, five, six, the TV was the savior of my childhood.
Why, the savior?
Well, I mean, I don't want to go into too much detail, but it was not the calmest domestic
environment, and I could go and escape in the TV by watching shows, or I could go in the
backyard. Amazing how much time I spent in the backyard without anybody checking on me.
I just, I started digging a hole. I thought I was going to dig my way to China.
and I kept digging and digging and digging and nobody found the hole and I had a shovel and I kept digging and I saw roots and I saw weird bugs and I kept digging and digging and I would cover the hole with a plank of plywood and someone uncovered said do you see what Nikki's doing?
Oh my God.
Look at the size of this hole.
And what was the upshot? Did you get in trouble for the hole?
Well, the upshot was it rained and then it was filled with water and I had like a pond of sorts.
But yes, I did get in trouble for the hole.
I got in trouble for the hole, and I got in trouble for, because evil Knievel was big back then,
I got in trouble for jumping off ramps on my huffy bike going higher and higher.
And I remember at one point I was going to put on a show for the neighborhood,
and I would jump over beer kegs.
I don't know how I had beer kegs.
There were beer kegs, and I would go over one, two, three, four on my ramp.
And then I had decided I was going to build a hoop of fire.
I was going to build this round thing out of cardboard and douse it with kerosene, light, and I'm going to jump through a hoop of fire, folks, and that was when they took the bike away.
Yeah, fair enough.
Yeah.
Wait, let me return to acting for a second.
Sure.
Was that, were that hoop of fire thing real, by the way?
Which one?
You weren't just improvising that?
No, that's all real.
No, that's all true.
These are all true stories.
Yeah.
So there was an interview just a couple years ago where somehow the subject of sort of retirement came up.
Right.
And you said, you know, you're no imminent plans, but maybe you had some plans to dial back.
But one thing that you said was that you felt like you had pushed screen performance as far as it could go.
And I want to know where did you find the limits?
Like, where did you push it to?
What were the ultimate boundaries for what you were able to do?
But, David, I don't think it was so much that I pushed it to the limit.
I think I couldn't come up with, I wasn't able to come up with any more ideas as to what to do with it.
I felt like I had realized, for better or for worse, for myself, I had realized for better what I had wanted to achieve with film performance with things like Vampire's Kiss and Raising
Arizona and adaptation. I kept pushing the envelope in terms of different points of expression within
film performance. And I felt that I had said what I wanted to say was cinema, landing on
dream scenario, which I'm very proud of, and thinking, well, how am I going to, what's next?
How am I going to stay interested? What am I going to do? What's going to challenge me? And I thought,
okay, it's either going to be stage or television, because I haven't done really that.
in any meaningful way, as far as I'm concerned.
Some high school plays, a bad television pilot that didn't get picked up.
And so I thought, well, how am I going to stay interested?
Let's do something interesting on television.
David Lynch had done Twin Peaks, and he reinvented, he introduced.
He took the mass tool of television, the episodic tool of television, and introduced
surrealism to millions of people, which is immense. Again, hopscotching, metatechually,
art synthesis. Halston did it. You know, he was a genius designer and he decided he wanted to
take the mass tool of J.C. Penny, but the snobs in New York pooped on his head and it didn't
pick up. Now everybody's doing it. He was ahead of the head of his time. So now you see it
everywhere. You see Armani Exchange. And many people get to enjoy designer stuff.
This is brilliant.
And so David did, and I thought, well, what can I do?
What can I do and change the format and stay interested?
And with Spider-Noir, I'm hoping that I will have instilled an interest in younger generations to enjoy the black and white style.
I designed my performance to fit in the black and white format.
That Howard Hawks way of talking, that talking on your shining, you know, all that stuff was designed to fit in the black and white format.
I have, so now two performance-related questions that I've been curious about.
The first is there's a movie that came out just a couple years ago called Gunslingers, a Western.
And your character does a voice that I would describe as maybe like a modern blues man or something like that.
So what happened?
Okay.
Yeah, what was the voice?
Okay, well, so what happened with that was, it's common knowledge.
We had a back-to-back strike in Hollywood.
And I suddenly got a phone call like, you need to do this right now or, you know, you're going belly up.
And I said, oh, no, really?
How much time?
One week.
I'm like, what am I going to do?
I want to do this other movie, but they pushed and they're not sure they're going to go.
how am I going to be able to afford to do the other movie, which is a movie called Madden?
Oh, right.
So the double strike hit, and I got the phone call, and I thought, oh, God, please, I don't want to do another commercial.
I had done commercials in Japan a million years ago, and I got burned there because it was, I thought it was, you never say never.
But I thought it was a toy, this little Pachinko machine that my cousin had in his best.
bedroom and we used to play it. I did not know. And I asked, is there anything wrong with this product in Japan I should know about?
No, it's a toy.
I said, okay.
And then I turned, I did the commercial, which was fun and goofy and slapstick and what have you.
And I got to embrace my inner Jerry Lewis.
But it was basically Japanese gambling.
They don't do it for money.
They do it for toys.
And then you could sell the toy, what have you.
And that, I really was, I had umbrage with that.
And so I thought I really don't trust this as a thing I should be doing, commercials.
Plus, you know, I had.
At a time I was going through this thing, but like, what would Jim Morrison do?
Well, he only lived at 27, sadly, and I don't know.
I'm 62.
I'm now older than many of my-
That's terrible advice.
What would Jim Morrison do?
Well, you know, he would not do a commercial, but he didn't live that long, so who
knows what would have happened.
But anyway, long story, short, I didn't want to do it.
And now I'm older than Beethoven was when he died and Humphrey Bogart and James Dean and all
these guys and John Lennon and all these heroes of mine are.
I'm now 62, and I'm still here.
And I wanted to do this movie Madden.
I didn't know how I was going to be able to buy the time to get to Madden.
And I didn't want to do a commercial.
And so along comes Gunslingers.
And I thought, okay, I'm a cameo in this movie.
Let's have some fun with it.
Could the movie be good?
I don't know.
The director seems like a nice guy.
But what can I bring that I'm going to find amusing?
And I remembered going on Dick Cavett a million years ago
with Miles Davis.
And Miles was like, you know, he was sort of like,
Nick?
Yes, sir.
Where's your leather jacket?
My leather jacket?
Yeah, do you learn nothing from Dennis?
Dennis?
Hopper, man.
What are you wearing that suit for?
Well, I, you know, and then I was on the show, doing this with my hair.
It was sticking up like Woody Woodpecker, again, back to Raising Arizona.
And then I had this trumpet with me,
I wanted Miles to teach me how to play the trumpet.
And then the trumpet fell down behind me.
He was like, you be careful with that instrument.
And so then I got the trumpet and I couldn't get a sound out of it.
It was so, there's been a couple times when I've really felt that horrible.
Three times in my life I really felt that humiliating, embarrassed feeling.
One was that when I couldn't get a sound out of trumpet with the maestro.
One was when I had to sing, love me tender to the president's wife at the Cannes Film Festival on a table because David Lynch demanded it.
and one was when I couldn't get the tune right on a harmonica in a high school play.
All three were disasters.
But to answer your question, I was channeling what I remembered that I loved about Miles's sound in his voice.
And plus I wanted to wear a green bowler hat.
And I thought, well, if I can do a Miles Davis sound and a green bowler hat, I'm happy.
So let's make the movie.
Let's just make the stupid movie.
I'm still trying to get over the fact you were asking yourself.
ever, what would Jim Morrison do?
Did that ever go wrong?
Probably.
Yeah.
Probably, should I really have another whiskey?
What would Jim Morrison do?
Nope.
Yeah, he would say yes.
He would say yes.
In?
Oh, go ahead.
No, I'm a big fan of his poetry
and his stage presence.
And his voice.
I think his voice, if you listen to,
it today sounds like it's so iconic it doesn't sound real it's like how can that come out of somebody
really a human being that that um what was let me come on come on come on now touch me babe
can't you see that i am not afraid what was that promise that i mean he just it's so full you know
i think my aunt my aunt knew him and and ucla i think they would go for Talia shire yeah they would go
for car rides together and talk philosophy.
He was a smart man, apparently.
And thus concludes the Jim Morrison portion of this interview.
That's probably best.
So what can you tell me about playing John Madden?
I actually was trying to think about it.
I don't think you've played sort of an iconic real-life character before.
No.
I really didn't know who he was.
I don't have...
in my view anyway, much in common with him.
David O' Russell is someone that offered me a movie a million years ago.
I think it was, I don't remember the name of the movie,
but anyway, it was a good movie, and he offered it and I said no,
and he's the only director that I ever said no to
who actually came back and offered me another movie.
Most of them, they get their feelings hurt or something
and don't call you back.
It's happened a million times to me.
And it's happened with Christopher Nolan.
It's happened with Woody Allen.
It's happened with Paul Thomas Anderson.
They don't call me back.
And my schedule did...
What movie did Christopher Nolan and Paul Thomas Anderson?
The Paul Thomas Anderson movie was a very early movie.
He'd show me a short film, which was very good with Phil Baker Hall.
And we were going to do something...
Hard eight.
Yeah.
And it didn't work out.
But anyway, David did call me back.
and I have I thought that that was really
it showed a lot of class that he would call me back
and invite me again and I didn't want to say no to him again
because I do have great respect for his talent
and it was a beautiful experience
I enjoyed working with David,
I enjoyed working with Christian,
I enjoyed working with all the actors, John Mullaney,
I mean, and we really got in step with each other
and so I'm glad I did it
But again, it was big challenge.
It was a stretch.
I mean, it's not, I don't think of myself when I think of John Madden.
So I was like, okay, how can I get way out of my comfort zone?
Which I think we talked about that was what David Bowie said to me.
I asked him, I said, how did you do it?
How did you keep reinventing yourself?
I just never got comfortable with anything I was doing.
And so that stayed with me.
in a movie called, I believe it's called Deadfall.
Yeah.
You, your character looks to me like you're doing a riff on Andy Kaufman's alter ego, Tony Clifton.
No, and I've heard that before.
That's not true, though.
I wasn't riffing Tony at all.
I was doing my own thing, which is interesting because I saw a screening of that movie with Spy.
Mike Jones, who had directed me in adaptation, and he loved that performance.
And then I saw his Beastie Boys video.
I think it was called, what was the video?
Rampage.
They were all in like...
Sabotage?
Sabotage.
And they're all in like these bad wigs, and these terrible sunglasses.
They all looked like Eddie from Deadfall.
I was, oh, okay, I think I know where that came from.
But no, I was
That was another movie I didn't want to make
And I felt like I had to because it was my brother
And I said, okay, I'll do it
Your brother directed it
Yeah, what can I do
That will make it interesting for me, you know,
And what can I bring to this?
So I just went full
Id release, just full
I didn't care if it made sense or it didn't
I just wanted to do this like live wire performance
in a bad wig and an upturned nose,
and the nose kind of went out and then up like that.
And I'm just, and I'm very proud of that performance.
I do, I do think it, I think it endures.
After the break, Nick and I talk about his resistance
to becoming a caricature of himself.
Maybe there's an element of like, gosh,
I really want to see Nick go off the rails,
and I'm not going to give them that every time,
and I hope they're not disappointed.
You said, you pointed to a film you did a couple years ago called Dream Scenario as sort of being the culmination in some ways of what you were doing.
And dream scenario for people who didn't see it.
You played a college professor who starts showing up in people's dreams.
But can you explain what was going on in that performance that makes you say, makes you point to it as a kind of culmination?
I think that because I was contending with this sort of meme, memification.
I coined the word memeification.
I don't think it was ever used before.
This memeification that I had lived through and needed to find a place to put it,
and that was the perfect vessel because the memes were not unlike the dreams.
And so the dreamification of my character and dream scenario was similar to me to the memeification of Nicholas Cage.
It's interesting that you bring up dream scenario as a way to address the memeification,
because I was wondering if that was part of the intention for doing that film.
And it was interesting because it also, that movie came not too long after you did the unbearable weight of massive talent,
in which you played a version of yourself.
And the character, Nicholas Cage, in that film, was also kind of contending with a public perception that he was uncomfortable.
with. And in my perception, the sort of feverish memeification has basically disappeared since
a dream scenario and since the unbearable weight of massive talent. And I wondered if in taking
on films that directly addressed that, if you were trying to sort of puncture that so that the
fever would break. Well, not consciously. No. But that's an interesting observation.
Has it? I didn't know that. I don't know if it had.
I think so.
Oh, well, that's interesting.
What is a meme, really? I mean, what is that? Is that a snapshot of something that happened culturally?
Like, I think it's interesting to look at that communication as a result of some of my performances that it would land in cyberspace.
in such a way that my face and vampire's kiss became the you don't say meme.
I mean, I don't know.
I think I'm flattered by it on some level, you know, that it communicated and it was remembered
that, um, potently, that it got into a whole new technology that I wasn't.
even aware of when I made vampires because it didn't exist.
You know, that's how I'm choosing to look at it.
I think positively it kept me in the conversation.
I have a slightly different theory for why some of your stuff in particular got
memed.
And I think it's also ultimately a flattering theory too.
but I think one of the things that memes do is, also I realize now as I'm talking,
I sound like a jackass pontificating about what memes do, but I'm just going to continue
sounding like a jackass.
It doesn't sound like a jackass to me.
Sounds interesting.
But, you know, memes are sort of the purest encapsulation of a particular feeling or sentiment
that then is otherwise being expressed.
like the example of the vampires kissed,
you don't say meme,
that is capturing a feeling and an emotion
that people have in the purest possible form.
And that's why it gets passed around
because people use it as a shorthand
for a feeling that they're having.
And seen in that light,
I think actually stuff getting memed
is a signal that you were doing your,
in your instance, in your case,
we're doing the job correctly, I would say.
think that there is a need for a vessel vicariously for folks who are good citizens who are doing their
best to be upstanding members of the community to live through and get their y-ya's out,
whether they're angry yiyahs or happy yiyahs or whatever it is.
is, I think, and I don't know how conscious I was of it, but that that has communicated through some of the meltdown performances in my work where people can tap into it and live through it without having to go and do it, whether it's mastick men in the pharmacy.
You know, would you like me to take it out on the street and piss blood, you know, or flipping out and vampires kiss.
or whatever it is.
I think that that, perhaps, more than anything else,
is what has enabled me to endure.
People that I gravitated towards, like James Dean,
when he did Rebel Without a Cause,
he was speaking to, I was 15 when I discovered that.
I knew what that felt like.
And so I think as a person that enjoys being an audience member, I find these actors or personalities in cinema that have helped me find my own identity or understand what I was going through in my own life.
It happened with Bruce Lee.
It happened with Trevolta and Saturday Night Fever, and it gave me a feeling of like, oh, I can I can do this.
Yeah. Did you ever tell John Travolta that his performance is having that? Sure. Well, what happened was what's funny. Your post-ar and face-off. Right, right. What happened was literally I was going to Horace Mann Elementary School and I used to go to the tropical aquarium store. Even then I was interested in fish. And I had these two buckets of tropical fish in my hands. And I had these two buckets of tropical fish in my hands.
had the t-shirt with, you know, just no sleeves walking with the buckets.
And I thought I was Tony from Saturday Night Fever walking there.
Yeah, Minero walking down the street.
And lo and behold, I'm at the stoplight waiting to cross near the school and upglides John
Travolta in a blue Adidas track suit and a gold, I think it was a 250SL Mercedes.
and he's looking at me and I'm looking at him like,
oh my God, I'm you right now and you're over there
with my buckets of not paint, but fish.
That happened and then kind of wielded into face off.
I have a million more specific questions
about acting and performance,
but can I just do like a quick, rapid fire,
Nicholas Cage lore series of questions?
And you tell me if they're true,
not. Okay. I'm in your hands. Let's have it. For better or worse? No, it's all good. What have you
got? I got a bunch. Okay. So here's the first one. Vampires Kiss in a, there was a sex scene
and you asked to have hot yogurt poured on your toes during the sex scene? Um, there was,
there was some yogurt, there wasn't hot yogurt, and I think I was administering the yogurt to myself.
But why?
I don't really remember.
Yeah.
Who knows?
It's better that you don't.
Yeah, probably.
Okay, next one.
There was an old playboy interview from maybe mid-80s, late 80s, something like that,
And there's just an offhand reference to stealing an aquarium from the Museum of Modern Art.
Oh.
Did that happen?
Yeah, well, it wasn't an aquarium.
And it was in California, and it was a, it was in the trash.
It was a loose-site box that covers art artifacts.
And I just took it.
And I used it as an enclosure for a Kingsnake.
So not stealing technically.
No, not really.
No, it was in trash.
I would say, yeah.
Reusing.
Trash picking.
All right, last one for now.
I might come back to some others.
But so apparently at Graceland, there's a private family-only area.
And I read that you were granted access to the private area and tried on some of the king's clothes.
and sat in the bathroom in the same position
that Elvis was found in when he was found dead.
Is that true?
No, that's not true at all.
What is true is, you know, my ex-wife and I...
Lise and Marie Presley.
When it was great, we were very close
and we had a lot of laughs.
And there were a couple of nights at Graceland
where she wanted to go upstairs, and so I did.
And I remember lying,
Elvis's bed and he had this, you know those little fiber optics things that spin and change
colors?
Like a lava lamp?
Not a lava lamp, but not unlike a lava lamp, but little fiber optics and it rotates and
then they can change colors like green and blue and little little plastic like strings
that, like whiskers that stand out and they can change colors.
They're usually sitting on top of a light box that changes colors as it rotates.
And I remember staring at that and being very relaxed by it and calmed by it.
And I enjoyed thinking of him looking at that and how it might have must have relaxed him.
So it was kind of a beautiful, poignant little moment in my life.
Okay.
So acting is in a lot of ways is all about choices, right?
choices that the actor chooses to make within the performance and the choices the actor makes
about what performance is to do. I think you're known in some ways for making unconventional
choices in performance or doing the unexpected thing or the surprising thing. And I want to know
about the difference between making choices in art versus making choices in life. And I assume that
in art, you're able to be very intentional and decisive about the choices you make.
Are you able to access that kind of control in life also?
Or do choices in life present difficulties that choices in art don't present?
I think that's a pretty astute question.
And within the question, I think there's perhaps some observation.
I, it's no secret that I have over the years, particularly early on, perhaps, had lack of impulse control and probably shouldn't have bought that car or shouldn't have bought that property or whatever it was.
And yes, in art, the comedian in me is looking for the surprise.
You get a laugh when you do something unexpected.
That's what makes people laugh in my view.
or you do something marvellously witty.
But it's usually the surprise element that evokes a laugh response.
So that part of my palate is always at work with the tragic part and sometimes at the same time.
But in my own personal life, for example, when you met me seven years ago,
I was more interested in other habits than I am now.
I am extraordinarily boring right now.
I live a very monastic life.
I am not taking any risks whatsoever if I can avoid it.
I am really going to go the other way.
And I am all about raising my three and a half year old, my toddler,
to have a happy and healthy life.
That is my focus.
And that and when I work, that's it.
You know, my two boys are grown up.
And, I mean, I do have vices.
I mean, I drink entirely too much caffeine.
I'm drinking 200 milligram, you know, strawberry energy drinks six times a day.
And I'm not good with my phone and the doom scrolling's got to stop.
They're not good.
vices to have. They're not good for your psyche. But I'm not enjoying a martini, which I did like my
martinis, and I'm not doing other things. I mean, I'm pretty monastic. So to answer your question,
I'm not doing any unexpected things in life at the moment. I have to say, I was wondering about the
question almost in more of a, like a mechanical cognitive way, because I think, this is, again,
I'm just pontificating in a way that I probably shouldn't do because it makes me sound like I
have no things that I don't know. But I think one of the real secrets to life, at least for me,
has been realizing, like if you can just get in between the impulse and a thought, you can really
live a much a much healthier life, you know?
Like you can, if you can just consciously decide, oh, I feel this, but I don't have to act on
the feeling.
I can take a step back and decide actually what I would want to do or what would be the prudent
thing or the better thing to do in a given situation.
And it seems like with acting, one of the gifts is to be able to do that, to say, okay,
my character is thinking and feeling this.
What is the best way for me to respond in order to deliver the performance I want?
Are you able to have that kind of perspective on day-to-day life choices where you can step back in the moment and say, how do I want to move forward right now?
Yes, I am.
And is it the same kind of thought process?
No.
Is it the same kind of?
So tell me about the difference.
Two different muscles.
One is a trained through years of experience, understanding.
of my instrument and what I can contribute on the set
for a specific character and performance
and with my co-stars that will flow
and collaborate in such a way that we can have a spark
and hopefully entertain you.
The other is just sort of saying,
well, you're doing this
and I am not going to get angry
because I'm not going to,
I'm going to let you do it.
that and be patient and take it in and think about what I can do to diffuse, but without engaging.
And that I find very easy.
I mean, when I was 19, no.
Now I'm 62, sure.
I'm, I'm, I know, I think I know what to do and what not to do, whether it's at home or in a restaurant or.
out in public, whatever.
I first thing I do is I don't go out if I don't think I can meet people well.
That's a choice.
And when I do meet someone, I know what it means to meet someone that I admire and have them ruin your day by being unkind.
My favorite pillars of the human spirit, which I'm a big believer in, are kindness, compassion, wisdom, and love.
and, you know, I want to embody those pillars when I meet people.
Who was the hero you met that was not kind to you?
The hero you met.
I don't want to say it because I still love him.
And I don't want to, he's extremely famous.
I mean, I don't want to upset him.
Yeah.
And sort of a two-part question.
Do you envision, if not retiring, at least sort of ramping down the amount of time you spend acting,
especially given that you have such a young child at home?
Definitely.
Yeah.
Though that's...
And then what would you do if you weren't acting so often?
Because I know in the past you've said things like, you know, you need to act to live.
So how would you feel that's...
Again, David, I'm all about my toddler. I mean, she takes 80% of my energy, and I'm focused on
that. So it's not about how can I fill the time. It's more about can I find the time that I
can be there to nurture her and guide her. And I'm lucky right now because she's young enough
that as long as we can travel together and I can come home to her, that's good.
But, yeah, that is on my mind how I'm going to compartmentalize my time.
And just the last question.
You know, I know early in your career you were interested in the idea of developing a mythology around yourself,
kind of becoming a larger-than-life character, I think.
You're looking quizzical.
Is that not the case?
No, I'm thinking about it.
I'm thinking about what you're asking me, and I'm connecting the dots.
And, you know, whether you realize it or not, you definitely have achieved that and are, to a lot of people, a kind of larger than life character or figure in the way that other kind of older Hollywood icons might be, I think of somebody like, you know, like a Dennis Hopper or something or a Brando, sort of reputation precedes them in a way, and they have a mythology around them.
And I want to know, like, what's been, what was good about achieving that and what was more challenging?
Because you might be larger than life, but I was thinking, well, it's your life that you're living that the other people are viewing.
That's a really profound, I think, question because I'm still trying to find my answer to it.
And it's pretty deep.
Yes, when I began, I wanted to cultivate this mythology around myself.
That was before we had this thing called the Internet.
And I didn't know that it would go that far, that it would be that widespread.
I didn't have the means to imagine that one day it would become this thing we call memes
or would go into different cultures around the world
or whatever it is that the Internet deploys.
So I think it went beyond what I initially was trying to cultivate
a mystique and aura and enigmatic presence, a mystery,
all that beautiful stuff that the black and white golden age,
as we call them, Bogart's and Cagney's,
Betty Davis's had before there was so much television and certainly before the internet.
Yeah, I guess another way of putting it would be what was gained in achieving the goal of
developing a personal mythology and what was lost.
Well, I think that there may have become, you know, it's like I grew up watching David
Carradine and Kung Fu, and I saw him in a movie and he didn't do any Kung Fu.
foo and I was disappointed. And so maybe there's an element of like, gosh, I really want to see Nick go
off the rails and I'm not going to give them that every time and I hope they're not disappointed,
you know. And what was the good thing about it? About having achieved the goal that you
set out for yourself in your early 20s. But David, it wasn't the goal. The goal was to create that
mystery, that enigmatic aura. This is something else that I had no reference point that it would
happen. And so I'm still trying to, so I'm
Can I say that what's the good thing?
The good thing is it kept me in the zeitgeist or it kept me in the conversation for better or for worse.
But is it perfect for me?
No, because that's not what the movie's necessarily about.
That little two-second moment, if you really want to see how the character got there, you need to watch the whole thing.
It's not just little screenshots of little jiffs or whatever they call them.
It's something building to that eruption, if you will.
And so maybe it's lost, you know, because now you hear all this conversation about attention spans and they're getting reduced and no one has time for that.
So now they're just seeing, you don't say or what you know.
So I don't know if that's what I had in mind.
What I had in mind was movies like Midnight Cowboy and Rebel Without a Cause and Last Tangle in Paris.
I had in mind movies that you would go and sit down and watch.
I didn't have sound bites and gyps in mind.
Yeah.
Well, you do have movies that people go and sit down and watch.
Thank you.
So thank you for taking all the time to speak with me.
I appreciate it.
Thanks for having me, David.
It's always a pleasure to have our conversations.
That's Nicholas Cage.
Spider-Noir will debut in the U.S. on May 25th on MGM Plus,
then globally on Prime Video on May 27th.
To watch this interview and many others,
you can subscribe to our YouTube channel
at YouTube.com slash at Symbol the interview podcast.
This conversation was produced by Wyatt Orm.
It was edited by Paola Newdorf,
mixing by Afim Shapiro.
Original music by Dan Powell,
Rowan Nemistow, and Marian Lazzano.
Photography by Devin Yalkin.
The rest of the team is Priya Matthew,
Seth Kelly, Joe Bill Munoz,
Eddie Costas, Amy Marino,
Mark Zemmel, David Herr, Kathleen O'Brien, and Brooke Minters.
Our executive producer is Alison Benedict.
Next week, Lulu talks with the cognitive scientist Laurie Santos
about the elusiveness of happiness and what we can do about it.
I think we really just definitionally think of happiness as about me, me, me.
And so much of the science and so much of this classic wisdom tells us
that's the way you get off track.
That's the way you pursue it in the wrong way.
I'm David Marquesi, and this is the interview from The New York Times.
