a self-parody (film: The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent – Tom Gormican, 2022)

The intention of parody is visible from the title. ‘The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent‘ directed by Tom Gormican is inspired by ‘The Unbearable Lightness of Being’, the 1988 screen adaptation of a novel by Milan Kundera directed by Philip Kaufman. Nothing is too ‘heavy’ in this 2022 film, just as nothing was too ‘light’ in the 1988 film. If it’s a parody, then we’re dealing with a Nicolas Cage self-parody. No one doubts that he is an actor with ‘massive talent’. But his career seems to have come to a standstill about two decades ago. His memorable roles – and they weren’t few – were all created in the 90s and early 00s. The pace of work has not slowed down at all, with the actor being forced to act in just about anything to pay off debts related to taxes and expensive divorces. These roles were mostly in action movies, some bizare, some boring, far from the level of the films of his peak years. In recent years, perhaps with the remediation of its financial situation, we can notice a qualitative recovery trend. ‘The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent‘ is part of this artistic return of Nicolas Cage. What could be more suitable for this purpose than an action film (with a good chance of being liked by fans audience of the genre) in which the main hero is himself … Nicolas Cage? We can also look at it as a kind of comic meditation on his own artistic path. Or simply as a likable comedy that reuses fun elements from his previous films.

The hero of the film, the actor Nick Cage is experiencing a life and career crisis. He is divorced and when he is meeting his teenage daughter he exasperates her by forcing her to watch the movies that made him famous or that he likes (‘oldies movies’ as we all teenage parents or grandparents know). His friend and advisor is an imaginary, younger alter-ego with whom he occasionally has dialogues. His agent is struggling to find him more meaningful roles than the B-movie action movies he’s been stuck in for the past few years (any resemblance is no coincidence) but to no avail. he is denied a much-desired role, which would have relaunched his career in another direction. Desperate and in debt, he accepts an offer to attend a Spanish millionaire’s birthday party for a million dollars. Upon landing in the picturesque island of Mallorca, however, a surprise awaits him. The Spanish millionaire is suspected of being the head of a mobster gang involved in the politics of Catalonia, who had just kidnapped, before the elections, the daughter of a candidate for the presidency of the province. The American secret services ask for his help to penetrate the suspect’s entourage. But the millionaire turns out to be a great cinema lover, an admirer of Cage and willing to make … a film together with him. The premise of an action comedy is there.

I’m having a hard time deciding if Nicholas Cage the actor is playing Nick Cage the actor in this movie or Nick Cage the character who happens to be an actor but is more of an adventure comedy hero. Perhaps both director and co-writer Tom Gormican and the actor himself left that dilemma up to the viewers. The character in the film borrows many elements from the actor’s biography, but the atmosphere is that of parody, or self-parody if you will. We can’t take some of the jokes too seriously, such as the use of prop guns in mob fights, but on the other hand, the script seems quite serious in its homage to Cage’s previous films, or other films that he loves. Self-parody and self-homage at the same time? Movies of this type are the more successful the less they take themselves seriously. ‘The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent‘ doesn’t relaunch Nicolas Cage’s career into stellar orbit, but it does provide viewers with over 100 minutes of reasonable entertainment. This is no small thing either.

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