Via YouTube/Lionsgate Movies

Nic Cage plays himself in the Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent trailer

The actor previously said that he can’t watch the 2022 film because it is ‘too bizarre’

The film where Nicolas Cage plays a fictionalised version of himself is finally set to arrive in April next year, following a lengthy delay due to COVID. Cage himself has previously said that he won’t be able to watch the film — apparently it’s just “too bizarre” — but, for the rest of us, the first trailer has arrived.

Directed by Tom Gormican, The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent sees “Nick Cage” get tangled up with a crime boss and Cage superfan named Javi (played by Pedro Pascal), after falling on hard times and accepting a million dollars to attend his birthday party.

“(Nick Cage) is an invented version of Nic Cage,” the real Nicolas Cage tells Entertainment Weekly. “The character is feeling unfulfilled and contending with the rejection that can happen so often in the small town that is Hollywood.” 

“It’s not me,” the Prisoners of the Ghostland actor clarifies. “I’m feeling pretty good about things.”

As if playing a fictional version of himself wasn’t meta enough already, Cage also plays Nicky, a Wild At Heart-era version of himself who appears in his imagination. “He’s got the lanky long hair,” Cage tells EW. “He’s just constantly riding Nick about his career choices.”

Echoing his previous reluctance about acting as a fake version of himself, IRL Cage goes on: “I wasn't too excited about the idea of playing myself, but when Tom sent me this script, Nicky reminded me a little of Jerry Lewis’ Buddy Love in The Nutty Professor. I always admired what he did with that movie. For me, Nicky steals the show.”

Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent also stars Neil Patrick Harris as Cage’s agent, Sharon Horgan and Lily Sheen as his ex-wife and daughter, and Tiffany Haddish as a CIA agent who ropes him into an undercover operation. The comedy thriller is scheduled to hit cinemas on April 22, 2022.

Watch the trailer below.

Read Next
dA-Zed QuizZack Fox answers the dA-Zed quiz: ‘Being mean is underrated’

The comedian, rapper and actor speaks to Dazed about his new film Lurker, how he does not want to network with you in the club and why he is basically a white woman

FeatureRidley Scott: ‘People want to be entertained and eat fucking popcorn’

We speak to the acclaimed director to mark the launch a brand new season at the BFI which honours his decades-spanning career

FeatureYoung Mothers, a tender character study of five teen mums

We speak to formidable filmmaking duo Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne about Young Mothers, their empathetic new drama about the harsh realities of teen pregnancy

FeatureDarren Aronofsky on Caught Stealing and why we should embrace AI

‘Filmmaking is a technology business’: The director talks to Dazed about his new comedy with Austin Butler, why stand-up shaped his sensibility, and how AI could transform cinema