Editing Interview:2020/10/20 “Cock!”: Nicolas Cage and Marilyn Manson in Conversation

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Nicolas Cage needs to work, but not necessarily for the reasons you and I need to work. At 56, the owner of one of the most eclectic filmographies in Hollywood history just can’t seem to slow down. ''Arsenal'', ''Vengeance: A Love Story'', ''Inconceivable'', ''Mom and Dad'', ''The Humanity Bureau'', ''Dark'', ''Mandy'', ''Looking Glass'', ''211'', ''Between Worlds'', ''A Score to Settle'', ''Color Out of Space'', ''Running with the Devil'', ''Kill Chain'', ''Primal'', ''Grand Isle''. All released within the last three years, all featuring Cage in try-anything mode. Whether he’s teetering on the verge of mania or whipping himself into a campy frenzy, Cage is acting with the abandon of someone who has nothing left to prove. With good reason.
 
Nicolas Cage needs to work, but not necessarily for the reasons you and I need to work. At 56, the owner of one of the most eclectic filmographies in Hollywood history just can’t seem to slow down. ''Arsenal'', ''Vengeance: A Love Story'', ''Inconceivable'', ''Mom and Dad'', ''The Humanity Bureau'', ''Dark'', ''Mandy'', ''Looking Glass'', ''211'', ''Between Worlds'', ''A Score to Settle'', ''Color Out of Space'', ''Running with the Devil'', ''Kill Chain'', ''Primal'', ''Grand Isle''. All released within the last three years, all featuring Cage in try-anything mode. Whether he’s teetering on the verge of mania or whipping himself into a campy frenzy, Cage is acting with the abandon of someone who has nothing left to prove. With good reason.
  
A descendant of cinema royalty (his uncle is the filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola), Cage forged a path in the mold of the larger-than-life movie stars he grew up watching. But where they may have zigged, Cage zagged: first as a chiseled teen heartthrob in ’80s fare including ''Valley Girl'', ''Rumble Fish'', and ''Peggy Sue Got Married''; then as the wickedly charming lead in auteurist oddities such as the Coen brothers’ ''Raising Arizona'' and David Lynch’s ''Wild at Heart''; then as an Oscar winner for his role as an emotionally vacant alcoholic in ''Leaving Las Vegas''; then as an action star in blow- ’em-ups such as ''Con Air'', ''The Rock'', ''Face/Off'', ''Gone in 60 Seconds'', and ''National Treasure''. And now, against the backdrop of his B-movie bonanza, he enters, well, his Nick Cage metaphase: as Joe Exotic, otherwise known as the Tiger King, in a new miniseries based on the incarcerated, heavy-drug-using, polyamorous big-cat owner made famous by Netflix, and as a cash-strapped version of himself in next year’s ''The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent''. His days at the top of the box office largely behind him—he was once one of Hollywood’s highest-paid actors, earning $40 million in 2009— speculation about his career choices persist: Is he paying off debts? Is he supporting his taste for rare artifacts? Is he just bored? As he tells his friend, the musician [[Marilyn Manson]], the answer is as complicated as it is simple.
 
  
 
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