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Observation #3: Slap a beard on me and call me crazy. Both during and immediately after POCNO, I felt dazed. Perhaps it was such a feeling as Joaquin Phoenix had after crashing his car on the Pacific Coast Highway several years ago, only to hear the disembodied voice of Herzog telling him to remain calm. No free-floating hallucination, Herzog happened to be in the car directly behind Phoenix and also helped assist him out of the wreck and kept him from dazedly attempting to light a cigarette while still in the overturned vehicle. Herzog has made a more notable name for himself this past decade with documentaries such as Little Dieter Needs to Fly, Grizzly Man and Encounters at the End of the World - all portraits of real-life figures in the throes of obsessions of some sort or another - but POCNO alludes to both his more recent dip into mainstream (or slightly more commercial) filmmaking with 2008's Rescue Dawn and his own checkered history with leading man Klaus Kinski, his collaborator numerous times in the 1970s and 1980s. It's hard not to draw the line from Kinski (as the mad conquistador in Aguirre, The Wrath of God) bug-eyed and howling on the raft surrounded by monkeys to Cage as drug-, sex- and gambling-addicted cop Terence McDonagh expounding with joy about his "lucky crack pipe." I remember the Nic Cage of my youth eating a live cockroach (Vampire's Kiss), starring in a bizarro z-grade sexual potboiler with Judge Reinhold (Zandalee) or wearing "a panty on his head" (you know which one). It's been a rough ride post-Leaving Las Vegas through 15 years of Bruckheimer productions and comic book adaptations to get back to unfettered, uncut, unhinged Cage. Truth be told, his over-the-top seems just a shade more mellow in his (and my) older age. At times, Cage seemed almost as if he was holding back . . . something? Or is that my jaded, seen-it-pose? Try as I might, though, I can't imagine any other current actor unhooking an old lady from her oxygen tank and pointing a gun at her temple to frighten her and convincingly selling it AND remaining likable.
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