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7 Unsettling Nicolas Cage Horror Performances Ahead of ‘Longlegs’

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Nicolas Cage horror movies

Nicolas Cage is a performer who routinely defies logic and expectations. A true national treasure of cinema (no pun intended), Cage has never been afraid to cross genre lines and take big swings with the characters he embodies. Such is the case in the new film Longlegs by Osgood Perkins. In the movie, Cage plays the titular Longlegs, an elusive and terrifying serial killer. While previously able to stay off the FBI’s radar, everything changes when a young recruit named Lee Harker (Maika Monroe) gets assigned to the case.

Bloody Disgusting’s own Meagan Navarro wrote in her Longlegs review that Cage delivers his “most unsettling performance yet.” With a career as prolific and varied as Cage’s, that statement should not be taken lightly. Ahead of the film’s release in theaters everywhere on July 12th, let’s take a look at some of Cage’s other unsettling, uncomfortable, and unnerving horror performances.


Red Miller – Mandy (2018)

When viewers first meet Red and his partner Mandy (Andrea Riseborough) in Panos Cosmatos’ Mandy, the loving couple leads a life that is just about as picturesque and enchanted as one can imagine. Residing in an introvert’s dream cabin deep in a thick mountain forest, the pair watch movies, discuss sci-fi novels, and simply enjoy being with each other. However, this changes when Mandy crosses paths with delusional cult leader Jeremiah Sand (Linus Roache), his small band of followers, and demon-biker soldiers.

What starts as a casual encounter soon leads to Mandy’s violent, senseless murder. Red’s grief over this loss transforms him into something dark and powerful, fueled by his need for revenge. As Red, Cage demonstrates his immense range as an actor. Seamlessly shifting from soft, subtle and loving to grief-stricken, violent and determined, Cage matches Cosmatos’ uniquely singular style and breathes entrancing and terrifying life into Red in a way few could match.


Peter Loew – Vampire’s Kiss (1988)

nicolas cage dracula

Robert Bierman’s Vampire’s Kiss is one of those films whose legacy will forever remain infamous and potent. In the film, Cage plays a young publishing executive who may or may not be turning into a vampire. While the script is competent, it isn’t the writing, ambiguity, or style that gives Vampire’s Kiss such a lasting and famous reputation. Ultimately, it is the performance that Cage delivers that provides the movie with its infamy.

As Loew, Cage absolutely terrorizes a young office assistant named Alva (Maria Conchita Alonso) as he vacillates between simply stressed and horrifically abusive. Cage also makes some performance choices that defy logic and baffle even the most imaginative minds. Scenery chewing isn’t a strong enough phrase for what Cage delivers, and it results in an unnerving anxiety that permeates every second and every frame of the film.


The Janitor – Willy’s Wonderland (2021)

With over 100 acting credits on his resume, it truly says something when a film offers a version of Nic Cage that no one has seen before. In the case of Willy’s Wonderland, that version, funnily enough, has Nic Cage saying absolutely nothing at all. Boasting strong Five Nights at Freddy’s vibes, Willy’s Wonderland features Cage as a drifter who gets tricked into a janitorial gig at a condemned amusement center. Even as meddling teens, homicidal animatronics, and neverending cleaning tasks get in his way, Cage never utters a word. Despite this, Cage captivates and adds bizarre surreality that wonderfully destabilizes an otherwise predictable outing.


Frank Pierce – Bringing Out the Dead (1999)

Critics and commentators have long hypothesized that Cage is an actor who best delivers when a director understands how to utilize and maximize his incredible skills. Unsurprisingly, Martin Scorsese is such a director and Bringing Out the Dead is proof. In the film, Cage plays Frank Pierce, an ambulance paramedic who is burned out in every way a human can be burned out. Tortured by the people he couldn’t save and the grueling demands of the gig, Frank spirals into an existential fever dream crisis complete with flashing lights, caffeine, narcotics, hallucinations, Patricia Arquette, and death’s eternal reality.

While not a traditional horror film, Bringing Out the Dead is an intensely bleak, dark, kinetic, and depressing cinematic outing. Cage and Scorsese feel united in their vision of Frank, creating a simultaneously sympathetic and upsetting character. Through Cage, Frank’s inner turmoil becomes a palpable presence as we watch him navigate the streets of Manhattan, trapped in a purgatory of his own making. Without a doubt, Frank Pierce is one of Cage’s most underrated and compelling performances.


Brent – Mom and Dad (2017)

Before Zackary Arthur became the absolute bane of Chucky’s existence, he portrayed the pre-teen son of Nicolas Cage and Selma Blair in this pitch-black horror-comedy from writer and director Brian Taylor. Flipping the script on classics like The Bad Seed, Children of the Corn, Village of the Damned and The Omen, it is the parents in Mom and Dad that develop a taste for blood. More specifically, their own children’s blood. As one might expect, Cage wholeheartedly embraces his role as a bad dad and takes the film’s uncomfortable premise exactly where it needs to go.


Paul Matthews – Dream Scenario (2023)

Dream Scenario Cage

Photo Credit: A24

In this odd little horror-comedy from Norwegian director Kristoffer Borgli, Cage plays a totally normal, totally average guy who suddenly starts appearing in millions of people’s dreams. Now, the horror part of this equation kicks in when these dreams turn into full-on nightmares, with Paul starring as the lead villain. It’s kind of like if Freddy Krueger had a less problematic origin story and was more dad-like, awkward, and endearing.

For the role, Cage had to play Paul navigating this weird new fame in the real world and execute dozens of smaller nightmare segments in which he terrorizes people in myriad ways. Ranging from brutal to simply creepy, Cage commits to these darker moments completely, creating an undercurrent of unease and uncertainty that permeates the entire runtime. In many ways, Dream Scenario is precisely that for Cage: a perfect artistic playground that amplifies and highlights his unique brand of brilliance.


Nathan Gardner – Color Out of Space (2019)

Coming as a surprise to no one, the combination of Nicolas Cage and H.P. Lovecraft in Color Out of Space results in a memorable Cage performance. In the film, Cage plays the patriarch of the Gardner family. Yes, the mysterious meteorite that lands in the Gardner front yard results in a wealth of nightmarish incidents for all involved, but Nathan contains a distinctive set of oddities all his own.

For one, Nathan is obsessed with his alpacas. Disquieting from the very beginning, this character trait only gets more unsettling as the film progresses. In addition to the alpaca thing, as the influence of the alien organism spreads, Nathan develops a speech pattern and inflection that sounds eerily similar to that of Peter Loew in Vampire’s Kiss. Soon spiraling into full-body freakouts and physical aggression, Cage displays the organism’s more subtle effects while elevating the film’s tension and more mercurial narrative aspects.


Unsettling Performance Honorable Mentions:

  • The Wicker Man (2006)
  • Adaptation (2002)
  • Deadfall (1993)
  • Leaving Las Vegas (1995)
  • Wild at Heart (1990)

Longlegs arrives in theaters this Friday, July 12. Get tickets now!

The upcoming serial killer horror movie marks the return of director Osgood Perkins (The Blackcoat’s Daughter, Gretel & Hansel). Nicolas Cage stars alongside Maika Monroe, with Monroe playing an FBI agent and Cage playing a serial killer.

In the film, “FBI Agent Lee Harker (Monroe) is a gifted new recruit assigned to the unsolved case of an elusive serial killer (Cage). As the case takes complex turns, unearthing evidence of the occult, Harker discovers a personal connection to the merciless killer and must race against time to stop him before he claims the lives of another innocent family.

The film is rated “R” for “Bloody violence, disturbing images and some language.”

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Five of the Worst Night Shifts in Horror Movies

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Sam Raimi struggles on the night shift in Intruder

A luxury team-building trip descends into a bloody fight for survival against a vengeful retreat leader in Corporate Retreat, out today in theaters. It’s the latest entry in a cathartic subgenre of workplace horror that examines every harrowing aspect of job employment.

No job is safe from horror, either, from babysitting to even the most white-collar gigs. But if you work an overnight shift? All bets are off. Vengeful co-workers and bosses aside, the night shift is likely to come armed with witches, creatures, demons, and all manner of things that go bump in the night. Even deadly outbreaks. 

Corporate Retreat, along with these five horror movies centered around some of the worst night shifts, will make you glad the weekend has finally arrived.


The Autopsy of Jane Doe

Passenger director André Øvredal goes full throttle for the scares in this quiet little chiller that sees a father and son coroner team stumped over the bizarre mysteries contained within the body of an unidentified young woman during an unexpected night shift. Well-executed scares, clever twists, and earnest performances by Brian Cox and Emile Hirsch give this supernatural haunter serious heft. While the narrative bides its time unveiling the truth behind Jane Doe’s battered body, it’s heavily steeped in witchcraft. In other words, The Autopsy of Jane Doe presents a new take on the subgenre. More importantly, it’s seriously scary.


Cold Storage

Cold Storage

COLD STORAGE, StudioCanal 2023

A lethal, mutated fungus breaks free from confinement deep within the bowels of a storage facility. At the frontlines of the madness are Teacake (Stranger Things’ Joe Keery) and Naomi (Barbarian‘s Georgina Campbell), two employees thrust into the middle of the chaos when they investigate an alarm beeping somewhere deep within the building. Director Jonny Campbell (Netflix’s Dracula), working from a script by David Koepp based on his novel, helms the goopy madness with workman efficiency. This lighthearted, goopy horror comedy romp makes the deadly night shift a bit more bearable.


Graveyard Shift

Graveyard Shift follows new hire Hall (David Andrews) tasked by his mean boss Warwick (Stephen Macht) to assist with the insane rat infestation beneath their mill. They find something much most monstrous as the cause. Though the film was panned, it’s a fun creature feature with an always welcome appearance by Brad Dourif as the intensely eccentric exterminator. The film also opts for a happier ending, whereas (spoiler), the story sees both Hall and Warwick getting devoured by the mutated rats, the crew in the upstairs mill none the wiser.


Last Shift

last shift welcome villain films

‘Last Shift’

Rookie Officer Jessica Loren (Juliana Harkavy) has been assigned to watch over a closing precinct on its final night of operationalone. With nearly everything already moved over to the new station, including rerouted 911 calls, it should be a pretty quiet night as she waits for a Hazmat team to arrive to remove biohazardous waste. Instead, it becomes a waking nightmare as she’s forced to deal with unsettling visitors. Last Shift, co-written by Scott Poiley and director Anthony DiBlasi, brings the scares.


Intruder

The overnight stock crew of a local grocery store finds themselves falling victim to an unseen killer in this highly infectious late ‘80s slasher. The deaths are delightfully gruesome and inventive; look for this killer to make excellent use of grocery store items as weapons. Frequent Raimi collaborator Scott Spiegel directed this bloody slasher, which means a lot of overlap with the Evil Dead II. That means putting Sam Raimi in front of the camera for a change, along with Ted Raimi and Evil Dead II’s Dan Hicks. Look for a cameo by Bruce Campbell as well! 


Corporate Retreat releases in theaters today; get tickets now.

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