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.
The first of two Cage films with "Vegas" in the title, Honeymoon is the sole positively reviewed film in Cage's first down period, which stretched from the late 1980s into the mid-'90s (and was marked by such forgettable duds as Vampire's Kiss, Fire Birds, and Guarding Tess). Directed by Blazing Saddles screenwriter Andrew Bergman, this 1992 rom-com offers a much more comedic take on the Indecent Proposal formula—Vegas actually reached theaters first, but Proposal was based on a 1988 book—that stars Cage as Jack and Sarah Jessica Parker as Betsy, a young couple that heads to Las Vegas to get married, only for Jack to incur a $65,000 debt playing a rigged poker game. His lender is Tommy, a professional poker player played by James Caan, who offers to wipe out Jack's debt if Betsy will spend the weekend alone with him.
Indecent Proposal ultimately grossed about eight times more than Vegas, but the latter had the better reviews (and it wasn't close). The film also brought Cage his second Golden Globe nomination (following Moonstruck).
“If Honeymoon in Vegas is funny—and it is—it doesn't exactly ring with structural perfection. You wouldn't go to see it again. But with wonderfully bizarre Nicolas Cage scrambling and screaming his way through the proceedings, 'Honeymoon' never attempts anything greater than goofy.” —Desson Thomson, The Washington Post