We're watching every Nicolas Cage IMDB credit in order so you don't have to. It's going to be weird. It's going to be fun. We're going to get off-topic a lot. Join us!
This week we watched Adaptation- Josh's personal favorite Nic Cage movie, and much like The Rock, this is an episode where one of our co-hosts gets WAY too into the movie and the other one has to sherpa the conversation along in an effort to not waste your time. Also, Charlie teaches Josh what a sherpa is.
In today's episode, we watch Sonny - Nic's directorial debut and the unofficial prequel to Tommy Wiseau's The Room, starring James Franco doing an impression of young Nicolas Cage on xanax. Also - the 4th Quarterly Cage Awards!
World War II is a time in world history that's been covered countless times in film, but never before has it been captured with the blinding light of Adam Beach's teeth. Also Nicolas Cage and Mark Ruffalo's mustache are in this too, but oh god. Those teeth.
Today's episode is a special audio commentary! That's right, it spans the entire 77-minute runtime of this bland movie that's almost impossible to find, rendering all of this useless. All of it. All hail the time cone.
On today's episode of Into the Classical Music with Charlie and Wikipedia, special guest Josh DiCristo stops by to discuss Nicolas Cage's love letter to his own singing voice.
Nicolas Cage wakes up in an alternate reality where his best friend is Jeremy Piven. It's terrifying.
The guys watch Gone in 60 Seconds. I'll be honest, I'm phoning in the description this week. THEY'RE NOT ALL WINNERS, PEOPLE.
In today's film, Nic plays a melting priest who drives a murder van across New York City in Martin Scorsese's sci-fi dystopian epic, set in the dark and gritty future of the early 90s. Kind of.
A part of Josh dies.
This week we take a deep dive into the dark and disturbing psyche of Joel Schumacher as we watch his superhero origin movie/psychological meditation on porno snuff films 8MM. One of these things is true and it's not going to be the one that you want.
This week we talk about a boxing thriller that contains one hell of a Nic Cage performance for about 20 minutes before it turns into a very different (but still good) movie. But I mean, come on. We want a screaming, coked-out Nicolas Cage for the whole movie or none at all. We also talk about how a lot of musicals have the letter "M" in it. We are not smart people.
City of Angels was an odd cookie to be sure but also everyone's internet connection breaks on this episode and nobody knows how to handle it so that's fun. We're somehow adults.
Face/Off is the greatest movie ever known to man and if any of you disagree, I will literally rip your face off and wear it as a trophy. And in the second half of this episode, we get into the Third Quarterly Cage Awards! Where we talk more about how Face/Off is the greatest movie of all time, but also Nicolas Cage's penis.
Due to a technical glitch, we re-recorded this episode two months after we originally watched the movie and thought it would be a good idea to not re-watch it. Basically we're as prepared for this episode as Nicolas Cage was for his southern accent. NAILED IT.
This week, Charlie watches The Rock for the 38th time and Josh watches it for the first time. They take very different things from the experience.
Nicolas Cage won an Oscar for this movie and Josh and Charlie talk about how New Jersey sucks and if ghosts are real. Also they mention the movie once or twice.
Josh and Charlie discuss Kiss of Death, the fact that John Hancock was an asshole, and the secret occult that runs the National Weather Service. 666 ILLUMINATI IS REAL.
The talented Nicolas Cage and his talented comedian friends star in this painfully untalented movie. Can movies really be described as untalented? Probably not but who knows! Listen to the episode and see for yourself!
It Could Happen to You might not be one of Nic’s best movies. Could be one of Isaac Hayes’ best movies. Hey, remember when Isaac Hayes was on South Park but then he quit because they made fun of Scientology? Good times!
Blah blah blah Guarding Tess was bad, these guys were funny, blah blah blah listen to this episode. Or don't. Go outside or something. Join a dating app. I don't know your life
I know it's bad form to curse in the description of these episodes but oh my god this movie is so fucking weird.
It's time for the Second Quarterly Cage Awards! For the first half of this week's episode, the guys talk about Amos & Andrew and a litany of other topics and for the rest of the episode, they reflect on the past 10 episodes but mostly on how bad The Boy in Blue still is.
Before he left Las Vegas... he... had a honeymoon? Sorry, that was stupid. Much like this movie. Much like this episode. Much like this entire podcast.
What could possibly outshine a Nicolas Cage performance? That's right. It's Judge Reinhold's Adam's Apple. Welcome to the world of Zandalee
Wikipedia describes Industrial Symphony No. 1 as "a short, avant-garde musical play". Josh and Charlie would describe it as none of these things. We would use meaner words. In fact, we do.
What's weirder than any movie starring Nic Cage? Any movie starring Nic Cage directed by David Lynch. What's weirder than any movie starring Nic Cage and directed by David Lynch? Josh and Charlie trying to do a podcast about it.
Josh and Charlie literally can't do anything right. Enjoy as that streak continues with Fire Birds.
Nella puntata di oggi di nella gabbia con Josh e Charlie, i ragazzi guardano ilpellicola, Tempo di Uccidere. Una bella terribile film italiano presentato in molto pessima qualità di persone abbastanza terribile che fanno cose molto terribili e poi dover cose terribili accadono a loro come una conseguenza. Google translate that ya punk-ass bitches.
I don't even know where to start so here's what I'll say. Josh and Charlie weren't able to watch a movie this week. They do, however, try to cold-call people who are connected to Nicolas Cage live on-air. Four times.
Nic is in this movie for a grand total of 30 seconds, he's wearing a weird fake nose, his role makes NO sense, and in a fit of rage, Josh tries to convince himself that he was playing an omnipotent God in the movie. So that happens.
The guys watch Moonstruck, Charlie struggles to pronounce Cher’s name, and Josh desperately tries to get Charlie to agree to a suicide pact. Look, it's only fair that you guys know what you're getting in to.
On the first half of today's vaguely-musical double episode, Josh and Charlie talk about Raising Arizona. For the second half, they hold the inaugural Quarterly Cage Awards! Honoring all things weirdly and beautifully Nic Cage.
Peggy Sue Got Married is 1) good, 2) includes large amounts of Nicolas Cage, 3) is not directed by Francis Ford Coppola and 4) does not involve Nic doing a weird voice. One of these is not true. It's the one you all hope it is.
Josh and Charlie watch what is legitimately the worst movies they've ever seen and because Charlie is still recovering from a surgery, he is only able to speak through a text-to-speech app with the voice of a British woman. That should be enough to convince you to listen, right?
This is a movie about a man who's sexually attracted to birds and honestly the strangest thing about it is that the man is not played by Nicolas Cage. This episode gets weird.
This week, Josh and Charlie watch a groundbreaking movie in the Nic Cage movie canon - The Cotton Club. Directed by Francis Kia Sorento Coppola, this film does not delve into the topic of Nicolas Cage pocket watches, but guess who does? I'll give you a hint. It's us.
Girl likes Sean Penn. Sean Penn likes girl. But can they work it out?!! We don't care - we just want to watch Nic Cage dance. And those glorious glorious locks.
This is another one of those movies that Nic is like, kind of in, but mostly it's Matt Dillon playing RUSTY JAMES - a name that somehow no one in the movie (and also Charlie) can stop saying.
The guy watch the 1983 comedy that iTunes, Google Play, Amazon Prime, and Josh and Charlie don't want you to see. There's a reason for that.
In this episode we delve into the last of Nicolas Coppola’s onscreen credits before his butterfly-like transformation into the man we know as Nic Cage.
Charlie and Josh dive head first into the rabbit hole of Nicolas Cage's filmography with his first-ever onscreen credit. Dear Lord what have we begun