CityLife

Cage marvels at his new role

Nicholas Cage in Ghost Rider: Spirit Of Vengeance Nicholas Cage in Ghost Rider: Spirit Of Vengeance

Nicolas Cage wants to make something clear - he’s not the crazy man you see in his movies. “I’m not insane. Damon Macready, my character in Kick-Ass was insane. He’s the 48-year-old who dresses up like Batman and tries to seek vengeance,” says a tanned and suited Cage of his role in the 2010 film adaptation of the comic book.

“The thing I’m attracted to are characters that allow me to realise my more surrealistic and abstract dreams for film acting,” he adds, in American vowels so flat he hardly needs to move his mouth.

“I think acting is no different to painting or music, and if you can get outside the box, or as critics like to say ‘over the top’ in a Francis Bacon painting, then why not a movie?”

Cage just wants to take on roles that provide an outlet for his imagination, he explains.

“That’s why I’m attracted to characters like Terence McDonagh in The Bad Lieutenant. He’s high on cocaine, so I can make certain sounds and do crazy things with old ladies and handguns.”

And it’s also why he was interested in reprising his Marvel comic role of Johnny Blaze, a renowned stunt motorcyclist who in the original 2007 film, Ghost Rider, is tricked into becoming the Devil’s henchman, and spending his life seeking out the wicked to suck out their souls.

In the follow-up movie, Ghost Rider: Spirit Of Vengeance, Blaze has isolated himself in a remote part of Romania, where he hopes to keep his alter ego at bay. However, spirited monk Moreau, played by Luther’s Idris Elba, rolls up to ask for his help in saving a young boy from the curse of the devil.

Blaze has to decide whether seeking vengeance for himself and the boy is a worthwhile reason to ignite the Ghost Rider.

“I was eight when I first discovered Ghost Rider and, in fact, I have the very first comic,” says Cage, 48.

“I would stare at the picture of that cover and I couldn’t get my head around the fact something so terrifying to look at, and who was using forces of evil, could also be considered good. How was he a superhero? It was my first philosophical awakening.”

A renowned comic buff, he feels it important to stress he’s not an obsessive.

“I want to make it clear that I’m loyal to my comics – but I’m not up at 4am with a stack of Spiderman comics,” he says.

In this latest film, Cage gets to play both Blaze and the Ghost Rider (previously the Rider was played by a number of stunt performers), which is something he relished. As far as Cage is concerned, the more risk the better.

“The odd thing with me – when you see me with all this caffeine on the table – is that it calms me down,” he explains.

“If someone puts some fire on me or asks me to drive very fast in a car chase, everything slows down and it gets my mind off whatever baggage may be happening. It all goes away and I relax, so I like doing stunts.”

It’s why he believes teaming up with film’s directors, Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor, proved the perfect partnership.

“They have this gonzo energy, this wild intensity and they’re both really up for anything. I think I fit into that, too,” says Cage.

It was Taylor who suggested Cage inhabit Ghost Rider, Blaze’s evil alter ego over whom he has little control. “That opened up all sorts of new doors for me,” says Cage.

“Since the Ghost Rider’s not anything you can relate to, it was important to me that there be some distance and some fear present when playing that part.”

That’s why he’d turn up to set with his face painted like a voodoo skull and wearing black contact lenses.

“The point is it stimulated my imagination to think I really was this character. I’d walk on set projecting this aura of horror. It was just like oxygen to a fire.”

Then he pauses. “The problem is when you’re shooting until 3am and you’re invited to go to a Christmas party in Romania, there’s some schnapps involved and you’re still in character. Well, all hell can break loose. I’m lucky I’m not in a Romanian prison.”

Cage was born the youngest of three sons in Long Beach, California, to a literature professor father and dancer mother.

His interest in film-making was possibly sparked by his uncle, the revered director Francis Ford Coppola, with whom he’s worked numerous times.

Cage changed his second name from Coppola to Cage shortly after his first feature, Fast Times At Ridgemont High, was released in 1982.

The following year he appeared as Randy in the sleeper hit Valley Girl and has since been in almost 70 films including the good (Leaving Las Vegas, in which his searing p­ortrayal of an alcoholic won him an Oscar in 1996), the darkly funny (1987’s Raising Arizona) and the downright ugly (the lambasted remake of The Wicker Man in 2006). But whatever the film’s outcome, his quirky eccentricity always pervades.

Cage adds: “The key is to be enigmatic.”

Comments (0)

You need to be logged in to comment. Login | Register


loading...

Buy Tickets TicketMaster.co.uk

More Tickets...