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THE WICKER MAN
Nicolas Cage knows all about remakes. Following crime thriller
Kiss of Death and heist movie Gone in Sixty Seconds,
he has even dared to touch the untouchable, turning
Wim Wenders’
Wings of Desire into 1998’s City of Angels. So
it’s no surprise that he should take on 1973 British cult
classic The Wicker Man. With this new version adapted and
directed by Neil LaBute (Nurse Betty, Possession),
Cage plays a sheriff named Edward Malus, who is sent to a remote
island to investigate the disappearance of a young girl.
Discovering an enclosed community (led by Ellen Burstyn) where
the interference of strangers is not welcomed, Malus’ journey is
not for the feint-hearted.
For the 42
year-old Cage, who won an Oscar for his searing portrayal of an
alcoholic in Leaving Las Vegas, approaching dark material
is nothing new. He may be best known for his action heroes, in
films like The Rock and Con Air, but it’s in films
like Lord of War (where he played an arms dealer) and
Bringing out the Dead (a paranoid ambulance driver) where he
made his mark. Nominated for an Oscar for playing a neurotic,
masturbation-obsessed screenwriter and his brother in
Adaptation, Cage is evidently unafraid by any role – which
may be why he accepted the lead in his other new film this
autumn, Oliver Stone’s hymn to 9/11, World Trade Center.
Like The Wicker Man, it stands the chance of being
criticised – but it seems that Cage wouldn’t have it any other
way.
How
did this new version of The Wicker Man start?
"The whole thing generated because my friend, Johnny Ramone,
who was a fan of horror films, had shown it to me. He had a list
of movies he wanted me to see that I wasn’t aware of. I mean, I
knew about The Wicker Man because I recalled images of
the poster as a boy, but for some reason the movie never got a
proper release in the States. And then he mentioned the title,
and I said, ‘That sounds interesting.’ I came over to his house
and we watched it together and the movie left me with the most
profound feeling, unlike any other film, really, in the way it
ended – which I don’t really want to give away. It made me think
a lot about it. I was disturbed for about two weeks."
How
did you get to know Johnny Ramone?
"We both had
an interest in posters. I met him though that way. He liked
monster posters and I did as well. He came over to my house one
day at a party and we got talking. He had a big collection. He
had all that stuff. I didn’t. I had one or two. So we got
talking about that and then I found out how passionate he was
about movies, and then we became friends on that basis."
What
made you think the original film was ripe for remaking?
"I
thought a lot about the movie, and whether there would be any
way to recreate another contemporary version of the story that
might reintroduce the title to people, people who don’t even
really know about the original. Most people here in the States
don’t even know anything about The Wicker Man. So I
thought it was an interesting way to bring something that was
excellent back to people’s attention. And the new version is a
different track altogether. There’s no way you really want to do
something completely the same – you can’t. There’s no point in
that."
How did
director Neil LaBute get involved?
"He
came into the office and talked about it, and came up with a
great idea. He made it a matriarchal society and he found
different ways of introducing the themes of the original into a
more contemporary concept, and how it could happen today.
I like Neil’s directing a lot. I like Nurse Betty. I
thought Greg Kinnear was excellent in that. I like In The
Company of Men. He’s got an extraordinary touch for showing
people who are suffering."
So you
suffer in the film then?
"Oh,
yeah! There’s no question. I’m on the receiving end! But I have
to say that the MPAA cut a lot out. That was a problem. I was
forced to deliver a PG-13 in order to get the movie made, and
the stuff that I came up with that was really wonderful Edgar
Allen Poe and grotesque, the MPAA cut. You will be able to see
that on the Director’s Cut DVD."
Can you
explain more about the Poe influence on the film? 
"I wanted to bring in an Edgar Allen Poe feeling to the film. I
remember when I first met with Neil on the set, I brought The
Raven with me, and a book of Poe stories. I wanted to create
that feeling of Gothic horror, if there was any way we could do
that. The movie is not gratuitously violent. You’re not going to
have pop-ups or cheap shots. It’s more about ambience and the
eerie quality of the place and the people."
Is The
Wicker Man, in your mind, very different from Neil’s other
films?
"It is quite
a bit different. It’s dealing with a society of women who have
been persecuted – most recently with the Salem Witch trials. So
they have found sanctuary in an island that they have to
themselves, and their Celtic ancestors are still informing them,
in terms of their beliefs. Now I don’t believe that
people…nobody that I know would say that people today are doing
these kinds of things. There’s a whole culture out there that
has Pagan ideals but they don’t kill animals and things like
that. Those things have progressed with the times – but maybe
there are sacrificial aspects in existence. Who knows?"
How
aware were you of the cult fan worship of the original movie?
"That
I didn’t know. I’m sure that whenever you tackle something like
this – and I wasn’t aware of that – I’m going to be under
attack. But that’s OK! Whatever inspires people. This is a very
different movie. I’m not going to say we’ve made a better film
or the same film. We haven’t. We’ve just made a different film.
Ellen Burstyn is excellent. She reprises the Christopher Lee
role, and Christopher Lee was amazing in the original. In a way,
I would say this was a tip of the hat, an homage, a thank-you
for inspiring us, we liked it so much, let’s see what else we
can do with the concept."
You’ve touched on horror before – initially, with 1989’s
Vampire’s Kiss…
"It’s been a while but you’re right, I do have an interest in
horror. I like the genre. I think there’s a lot of places you
can go with it. Although I was talking with Oliver Stone just
yesterday, and I asked him why he won’t make a horror film and
he said, ‘You can’t top the Japanese, so why do it?’ And I said,
‘What kind of thinking is that? It would be your own thing.’ "
You have just worked with Stone, of course, on 9/11 drama
World Trade Centre. Are you concerned about what the
reaction to that will be?
"I can’t
worry about what the reaction would be. I know the spirit with
which we made the movie, and I know that I wanted it to be a
film that would be healing and would provide encouragement in
some way. Look around – the world is going through a lot right
now. I think people are looking to movies to provide some sort
of higher ground to help a positive outlet."
Playing
the port authority cop John McLoughlin, who is trapped in the
rubble, would you say it was the most emotional role of your
career?
"I would say
so. There was no question that it was a daunting idea to go into
World Trade Center by Oliver Stone. I was trying not to
dwell on the pressure of that and just try to stay on task and
do my job."
Do you
have any regrets about not playing Superman for Tim Burton, now
the new Bryan Singer movie has been released?
"No, I mean I would like to work with Tim. I feel like we need
to work together at some point. I know it would be a good match.
But I have no regrets. I’m a big believer that the right person
for the part is the one that winds up making the movie. I also
feel that, in some ways, I’m recreating the experiences of
someone you could say is a real Superman in World Trade
Centre. I was watching a biography on A&E and it was about
the history of Superman, and the people that made him, and how
it’s affected the people around the world. They said it’s the
firemen and the policemen who risked their lives to save others
that are the true Supermen."
So you see
them as linked to the comics, in a way?
"It’s ironic to me that you have the comic book version of
Superman, then you have the flesh and blood, true-real version
of Superman, who was an ordinary man who has risen to a level of
the extraordinary by virtue of the fact that he was exposed to
extraordinary circumstances of hardship – and he was able to
overcome and survive. So the reason why these comic books are
important to us, is that they help each and every one of us –
almost in a Jungian way – get through the day. It’s like what
Joe Campbell was saying about power of myth. And in
John
McLoughlin, I have a real version of that. And I think that’s
why World Trade Centre will be healing. We need these
symbols and icons to give us hope."
You have
just wrapped on Ghost Rider, in which you will get to
play a Marvel Comics superhero Johnny
Blaze. Is this a long-held ambition to play him?
"Ghost Rider is good for me because there are a lot of
people out there who know who Ghost Rider is but they’re real
comic-book enthusiasts. They’re way into the comic book
zeitgeist. I was able to try to create my own take on the
character to make him interesting for the film audiences. It
gives me a chance to introduce you to Ghost Rider, rather than,
say, Batman introducing you to…Michael Keaton."
Has it been easy
for you to go back and forth between big budget films and more
independent fare?
"It’s not easy to do that. I don’t want to worry about people’s
expectations, but it’s inevitable that people do want a degree
of certainty with what they’re going to get. I’m not providing
certainty. I want to be full of surprises, and I want to
surprise you and hopefully entertain you, and I want to keep you
guessing. And maybe that will be the certainty. I want to always
find new ways of reinventing myself. I just don’t ever want to
get comfortable with anything I’m doing."
THE
WICKER MAN
will be released by Lionsgate UK on 1st
September, 2006.
Interview
courtesy of Lionsgate UK
Related Topics
The
Dan Higgins Column: Death of the Duplicate
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