Nicolas Cage's 10 Best Movie Roles


recent appreciation of the Coens' oeuvre, Mike D'Angelo laments the fact that Cage and the Coens haven't re-teamed in the years since: "The Coens have never made another movie with Cage, which seems criminal, given how perfectly his recklessness meshes with their control-freak exactitude."">Raising Arizona (1987)

Raising Arizona (1987)

Cage's only collaboration with Joel and Ethan Coen has remained one of the brothers' most well-liked films, a charmingly kooky response to their dead-serious 1984 feature debut, Blood Simple. In a recent appreciation of the Coens' oeuvre, Mike D'Angelo laments the fact that Cage and the Coens haven't re-teamed in the years since: "The Coens have never made another movie with Cage, which seems criminal, given how perfectly his recklessness meshes with their control-freak exactitude."

As video-on-demand continues to become the preferred route of distribution for a certain kind of independent film, much is being made of Nicolas Cage's willingness to slum for a paycheck, with recent examples including already-forgotten, small-screen-friendly items like Seeking Justice, Trespass, Stolen, and The Frozen Ground. (His character names in these projects — Will Gerard, Kyle Miller, Will Montgomery, and Jack Halcombe — are as interchangeable as the titles of the films.) Aside from citing the obvious appeal of doing work for money (a defense Cage himself brought up in a recent interview with The Guardian), it's also possible to back Cage by acknowledging the consistency with which he's taken on “serious” roles over the years.

David Gordon Green's Joe, which hits limited release this weekend (more details on that here), marks the latest instance of this trend, with Cage giving a reportedly subdued performance as an ex-con named Joe Ransom. In that spirit, we've put together a rundown of some of the actor's finest performances, all of which serve as proof that, though his over-the-top inclinations may make for a side-splitting YouTube compilation, Cage has amassed a career that few contemporary actors can equal. This list is hardly airtight in its exclusivity, so a few honorable mentions ought to go out to a pair of Cage's deliriously uneven auteur collaborations (David Lynch's Wild at Heart, Brian De Palma's Snake Eyes), 1983's Valley Girl, 1987's Moonstruck, and Alex Proyas's Knowing (a favorite of the late Roger Ebert).

Danny King

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