Favorite - Wild at Heart.
Best acting - Leaving las Vegas.
Unique Gems - Raising Arizona, Red Rock West, Knowing, Moonstruck, Adaptation, Bringing out the dead, Mandy.
Bringing out the Dead is a goddamned underrated masterpiece. It's Nicholas Cage in his perfect unhinged element, playing perfectly to his strengths in a movie where they can really shine.
Knowing is an amazing movie that has been lost to time. I was flying from Philly to Ireland and can't sleep on planes, so I watched that, and it was so mind blowing that I had to wake my wife up to make her watch it.
Well, I think his best performance was in 8mm. Brilliant movie, and often gets forgotten in favor of his lighter roles.
That being said, my favorite is Con Air. It's ostensibly an action movie, and has that 80s action movie vibe, but all the scenery chewing him and Malkovitch do takes it to new heights of hilarity at times. They both over acted so hard it went beyond silly and into epic. It is absolutely the most fun movie he has ever done, including Raising Arizona, which I love too.
I love everything after Cage and Travolta swap faces. Watching the two of them impersonate each other is top notch. The cream on top of some high quality John Woo action cake.
Wild at Heart is the clear favorite for me. I'm a big David Lynch fan, and that movie is just deliciously bizarre.
As far as hidden gems, I don't know. I haven't seen a large portion of his filmography, and I'd guess that what I've seen is probably his better known stuff. Not much help there, sorry.
I'm so glad someone else mentioned Wild at Heart, that is without a doubt my favourite Cage movie of all time. He's in vintage form in that film. It's so funny too, like legitimately funny. Kind of like that one he did with Elijah Wood, The Trust. He was fucking hilarious in that movie, it felt like a return to vintage form, he got creative with it. A lot of people hated it, I guess because of the abrubt ending, but if you focus on Nic's performance it's a truly great movie. I'd call that a "hidden gem" for sure. More people need to give it a chance, it really is a great film
My favourite hidden gem is Red Rock West
One of those times I first cought on TV showing at 11pm and I've got to get up at 5:30 am. Started watching and had to see the end
I'm nearly at the 50 mark for Cage films seen (and would have got there if the cinemas had been braver with Dream Scenario and The Arcadian) but it can be tricky judging his films. However, I am making a list of his films from the wildest to the most mundane so I'm going with that.
My top of the pops is Mandy as it feels like it was designed just for me but it isn't the kind of film you can just jump into, you need to build up to it.
For hidden gem I'm going with the biggest difference between my rating and IMDb's average, so it'd definitely be Drive Angry, followed by Mom and Dad.
Biggest disappointment: Prisoners of Ghostland - Cage in a Sion Sono film, costarring Take Sakaguchi, with a weird premise has to be right in my ballpark but it just felt like it was trying too hard.
Wow Nic did so many more movies that i thought. I've seen a lot of them but not all.
I'm surprised no one said The unbearable weight of massive talent. I didn't really want to watch that movie but thought it was great.
He has so money good movies but if you want to see him at his most unhinged watch vampires kiss . One of my favorite parts is when he yells the entire alphabet at his secretary.
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans should get some love in here. Cage is a madman in that one and was directed by Herzog so it’s got some vibes for sure.
I like his horror stuff. Colour Out Of Space was good. Wally's Wonderland was a horrible movie but Cage made that movie. And he didn't say a word. He insisted on altering the script here and there. No dialog was one of his demands.
He improvised a dance at a pinball machine that is just trademark Nic Cage.
Dream Scenario was ace.
There are still some on my watch list, Renfield seems like it'd be amazing. I've made arrangements for the next Cage nights with the Cage night watching crew.
I like renfield. The movie isn't great, but seeing Niv Cage absolutely not Phoning it in is so refreshing. I watched that movie a few month ago and still think about him saying: "he's a hussssk." Almost daily
I don't know what'd be a hidden gem, but I adore Moonstruck. It's a masterpiece of entertainment, acting, and all around beautiful cinematography. The entire cast is phenomenal, and Cage is just...glorious. I've practically memorized the whole damned movie, I've seen it so many times, over the years. I have an absolute passion for it, and will talk about it for hours with anyone who'd let me.
Convince my SO to watch Vampire's Kiss with me recently and she hated it but I've got love for it. It doesn't make much sense, has an awesome soundtrack and he really went in on just being weird with the role.