Every Good Nicolas Cage Movie, Ranked
One of Hollywood's most prolific and versatile actors, Nicolas Cage launched his big-screen career in the early 1980s at the age of 17 and has since appeared in over 80 features in seemingly every genre, including screwball indie comedy, harrowing drama, rom-com, thriller, action, animation, and horror. In that span, Cage has moved from indies to big-budget popcorn fare and back again, along the way working with quite a few noted directors including Martin Scorsese, Werner Herzog, David Lynch, the Coen brothers, Spike Jonze, and his uncle, Francis Ford Coppola. (Cage's birth name, of course, is Nicolas Coppola.)
But for every great (or at least interesting) project in Cage's filmography, there is at least one outright dud, befitting a man who has both won an Academy Award and been nominated for more Razzies than all but five other actors in history. Cage has famously taken on numerous roles in low-profile, straight-to-video genre films in order to fund a lavish lifestyle and pay off a tax debt. But the resulting string of instantly forgettable, poorly reviewed titles appears to have dried up, and recent years have seen the actor once again selecting far more interesting projects and returning to the world of critical acclaim.
Fortunately, his latest film (The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent) looks like it will be another one of those late-career highlights. But where, exactly, does it place among his other work? In the gallery on this page, we rank every "good" Nicolas Cage movie in order (saving the best for last) by Metascore, which represents the consensus of top professional film critics. In this case, we are restricting the list to only those films scoring 61 or higher, which encompasses all titles receiving generally positive reviews from critics.
Additional content from Keith Kimbell.
Director Francis Ford Coppola had cast his nephew in two previous films, but this 1986 rom-com fantasy is the first time that Cage had a major part in one of them. Of course, the titular role belongs to Kathleen Turner, who plays a woman who is newly estranged from Charlie (Cage), her husband and one-time high school sweetheart, and goes without him to her 25-year high school reunion, where she suffers a fainting spell. She awakens to discover herself back as her high school self in the year 1960, where she gets to see a new side of Charlie as events play out differently than the first time around.
Cage delivers an over-the-top performance as the would-be singer Charlie (adopting both false teeth and an unusual high-pitched and nasal voice) and failed to impress producers or co-stars with his on- and off-set antics. But the film was a hit and later inspired a stage musical.
“The film features good acting from almost everyone, the one notable exception being the annoying Cage who adopts a grating constricted voice for the role.” —TV Guide