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Post Info TOPIC: Exclusive Empire Nicolas Cage Webchat Transcript!


Faery Queen of Cagealot Castle

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Date: 12:30 AM, 01/27/12
Exclusive Empire Nicolas Cage Webchat Transcript!
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Empire have published their transcript of today's webchat with Nicolas Cage that some of us were lucky enough to attend! Member of the Cagealot family Lady Roxanne had her quesstion answered (at length!) by the man himself!! A momentous occasion, recorded here for all to enjoy!

Thanks to empire and gratitude to Sir Nicolas for giving his time to the fans in this way today!

starry

http://www.empireonline.com/interviews/interview.asp?IID=1444

Exclusive Nicolas Cage Webchat 
The Ghost Rider himself answers your questions...
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Nic Cage is the man that brought us The Rock, Con Air, Face/Off, Adaptation, Leaving Las Vegas, Raising Arizona, Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans, Kick-Ass, and, as they say, many, many more. So it was a great honour having him round the Empire office for a webchat - where he was posed such important questions as "Would you like to appear in Expendables 3?", "What's the best line you've ever said on screen?" and, perhaps most importantly of all, "What's your favourite sandwich?" Check out all his answers to all your questions here below, and just in case you were wondering, Ghost Rider: Spirit Of Vengeance is out on February 17.

Exclusive Nicolas Cage Webchat

snake-eyes says: After winning the Oscar for Leaving Las Vegas, was it a conscious decision on your part to dive into action cinema with what I refer to as the 'Cage Action Trilogy' of The Rock, Con Air and Face / Off? All great films by the way!
Thank you, and yes it was a conscious decision to do what was unexpected.


blunderwoman says: Hello Mr. Cage. My friends and I hold a bimonthly Cage-Fest, which is dinner, drinks and a triple bill of your movies. We would be honoured if you could recommend three of your finest for the next one which is in a fortnights time. Also, you are very welcome to join us...
Thank you very much for the invite, it sounds like fun. I think the best way to have a trilogy of movies is to find ones that are diverse and provide a kind of counterpoint, so I would go Adaptation, Con Air and Bad Lieutenant.


dylanisis says: In a Q&A for your amazing directorial debut Sonny, you mentioned you wanted to make a movie with Roger Corman directing and using vintage sets, costumes, effects etc. – will this ever happen?
I really hope so; I had a lovely meeting with roger in New Orleans and I expressed my total admiration for him and movies like Masque Of The Red Death and all of the Edgar Allen Poe stories he has brought to cinema, and wanted to find a way to shoot a movie in the same style because of my dream to star in one of those early Corman classics. How could we do it? Could we get the same fog machines? The same blood that would photograph the same colour; the same costumes, the same sets? We talked about it and he was excited about it, but we haven't found the money yet to make the movie. I have the script however.


philaiston says: Hi Nic, how did you prepare for your role in Matchstick Men? It must have been a tough process, especially to do it as well as you did.
Thank you. It was something that I had been thinking about adding to a performance, which is a sort of Tourette’s syndrome spectrum of behaviour. Some people that I know had struggles with it, and I wanted to say something about it. It wasn't in the script; the script was about obsessive compulsive disorder. I added the tic spectrum because that would provide interesting behaviour, to me. But I did it with love; I didn't want to do it in a way that would seem like a comical insulting portrayal of it. I want wanted it to seem like a loving portrayal of someone who was having a hard time with it.


Roxanne says: What were the biggest challenges physically or psychologically to perform both parts of John Blaze and Ghost Rider?
It was the first time that I played Ghost Rider. Blaze was easy; I knew he was a man who had been living with a curse for eight years of having his head light on fire, and the tone that would take. I compared him to a cop, or a paramedic who develops a dark sense of humour to cope with the horrors he has seen. But Blaze has also caused the horrors, so he's hiding out because he doesn't want to hurt anyone else.

Ghost Rider was an entirely new experience, and he got me thinking about something I read in a book called The Way Of Wyrd by Brian Bates, and he also wrote a book called The Way Of The Actor. He put forth the concept that all actors, whether they know it or not, stem from thousands of years ago – pre-Christian times – when they were the medicine men or shamans of the village. And these shamans, who by today's standards would be considered psychotic, were actually going into flights of the imagination and locating answers to problems within the village. They would use masks or rocks or some sort of magical object that had power to it.

It occurred to me, because I was doing a character as far out of our reference point as the spirit of vengeance, I could use these techniques. I would paint my face with black and white make up to look like a Afro-Caribbean icon called Baron Samedi, or an Afro-New Orleans icon who is also called Baron Saturday. He is a spirit of death but he loves children; he's very lustful, so he's a conflict in forces. And I would put black contact lenses in my eyes so that you could see no white and no pupil, so I would look more like a skull or a white shark on attack.

On my costume, my leather jacket, I would sew in ancient, thousands-of-years-old Egyptian relics, and gather bits of tourmaline and onyx and would stuff them in my pockets to gather these energies together and shock my imagination into believing that I was augmented in some way by them, or in contact with ancient ghosts. I would walk on the set looking like this, loaded with all these magical trinkets, and I wouldn't say a word to my co-stars or crew or directors. I saw the fear in their eyes, and it was like oxygen to a forest fire. I believed I was the Ghost Rider.

Exclusive Nicolas Cage Webchat

Essjai says: You’ve worked with a range of directors, who do you feel has gotten the most out of you as an actor?
I think that Mike Figgis and David Lynch, because of my Ghost Rider experience, Brian Taylor and Mark Neveldine, John Woo, and Werner Herzog. Probably Martin Scorsese in Bringing Out The Dead and Martha Coolidge for what she gave me in Valley Girl. She helped me believe in myself.


Big_Pants says: Whose idea was it for you to channel the great Adam West as Big Daddy in Kick-Ass? It's by far one of my favourite performances in a comic book movie.
Thank you. It was an idea that came to me when Matthew Vaughn showed me the belt that he wanted me to wear as Damon, as Big Daddy. I had the choice between an all-solid black belt, or a black belt with yellow pockets, which looked very much like the early Batman utility belt from the 60s, and it occurred to me, why stop there? Why not have Damon so crazy in his vigilante mode that he takes inspiration from Adam West's portrayal in the ‘60s Batman TV show? That if he can speak like him, he will be able to achieve his vengeance along with his other skills.


TCB says: You’ve said Wild At Heart was the kind of movie you wished Elvis had made, which led to Sailor channeling Elvis. Are there any other types of movies you wish Elvis had done instead of all those musicals? 
My feeling about Elvis is that he was a very good actor with great comedic charm, and that he would have worked well in Wild At Heart, but Wild At Heart was more my "Andy Warhol performance" than my Elvis performance, and what I mean by that is that – and I have to go back to a book by Stanislavsky called An Actor Prepares here – where he put forth the rule that you must never imitate anybody while acting, which I understand, but rules are made to be broken.

And I wanted to put this to the test. So I thought about Andy Warhol, and how he in his art would take pop icons and make poster art pieces with these famous faces. Having also been a believer in art synthesis - in other words, what you can do in one form, you can do in another – and I was excited by the idea of breaking Stanislavsky's rule and give an Andy Warhol performance by overlaying Elvis's aura on the film Wild At Heart. The way I can realise my film acting dreams of abstract expression is by finding characters that are flawed in some way that will provide a context where that expression still works: for example, Ghost Rider is a demon, a fallen angel. Blaze feels the pain of the transformation.

That pain provides a context where I can be very abstract in my vocalisation and my movements. Bad Lieutenant, I play a cop who's high on drugs. Those drugs are why he can be so extreme in the portrayal. These ideas are not always popular with critics, but there is a school of though that says if you piss the critics off, you're probably doing something right - and all of my heroes, whether it be in music or painting or cinema, have pissed the critics off.


ABCD says: You've delivered some amazing lines over the years -- a bunny in a box springs to mind -- do you have any favourites?
There's a movie I made with my brother called Deadfall, where I say, "Vive la f***ing France, man!" That's one of my favourites.


Quentin_Cappucino says: Hi Nic, huge fan. Is it true that you camped in a haunted forest while making Ghost Rider: Spirit Of Vengeance? If so, that is ridiculously cool!
I went to the Bermuda Triangle of forests, known as the Hoia-Baciu Forest, and I went for a drive through the forest and saw a man who was just walking amongst the trees, and I asked him a question, I rolled down the window and said, "Do you live here?" He said yes. I said, "Is this forest haunted?" He didn't answer for about a minute, he just looked at me and said, "Yes". I said, "By what?" and he said, "Have you seen the floating people with no legs?" I said, "Not yet, but I hope to real soon." Then I asked him if it was OK for me to take a fallen branch, so I grabbed a branch that was about six feet in length and four inches wide, and I took it home to my little cottage in England and I chipped away at it and varnished it and made a nice staff out of it. I'm probably the only person in Glastonbury with a Hoia-Baciu staff.


RobbieWilk says: Hi Mr. Nicolas Cage, you turned on the Christmas lights in Bath a while back. You obviously like the city a lot, and stay there a fair bit. Would you ever like to film there?
Yes. I would like to film there, if only because I’m happy there and because it would be a beautiful backdrop to a story, as Jane Austen has proven.


Sean Twomey says: You're very dedicated to the characters you play. Of all the roles you've portrayed what was the most taxing mentally and would you ever go to those lengths again? 
I think that Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance was mentally taxing, if only because I had to go to a Christmas party shortly after I had wrapped photography in Romania at two in the morning as the Ghost Rider. The invitation had a Christmas ornament on it with Ghost Rider's face on it as a tree. I had a couple of schnapps and went to the party; I had not entirely let go of whatever magic I had been channeling, and all hell broke lose. In fact, I think I kept saying over and over, “Merry Christmas you assholes!” I am lucky I'm not in a Romanian prison.

Exclusive Nicolas Cage Webchat

kathen says: Hi Mr. Cage, just wondering... What is your favourite sandwich?
The roast lamb sandwich with white bread and a bit of mayonnaise and arugula, thinly sliced. You can get it at Muso & Frank's Grill on Hollywood Boulevard, and it's our oldest grill; it's been around since 1917. If you like pancakes, they have good flannel cakes there, which are thin pancakes kind of like a crepe.


dylanisis says: Was there any truth you were courted to be in The Expendables 2?
I know only what you know about it. There wasn't much discussion related to that.


philblakeman says: Is there any character you'd like to revisit? Do you ever wonder what happened next to Stanley Goodspeed or Cameron Poe?
I would like to hook up with one of the great Japanese filmmakers, like the master that made Ringu, and I would like to take The Wicker Man to Japan, except this time he's a ghost.


Dan P says: Hey Nic, I've heard your working with Charlie Kaufman again. After 'Adaptation' (my favourite movie ever and favourite performance of yours) What drew you back to the Kaufman material?
I thought, and this is only if it really happens and I hope it does, I don't know how much of this I can talk about because Charlie is quite private about these things and I don't want to upset him. But I have a concept for the part he sees me in and I haven't discussed it with him yet. That's what's drawing me in. I'm sorry to be so cryptic but I can't talk about it yet.


Olishuter says: I loved the National Treasure films – is there any news of doing a National Treasure 3, if so, would you like to do another one and where?
I would, but I have not heard any news about a third one at this time, and it would be interesting to take National Treasure into South America.


Jess says: You've done so many films, have you ever or would you consider doing theatre?
I would consider doing theatre, but predominantly my interests are cinema-related.


Drobe81 says: Hi Nic, would you ever consider a role in The Expendables 3, if Sly was to ask?
I would read anything that Sly had me in mind for.


Stack says: I'm going to a fancy dress party as Nicolas Cage. Which of your characters should I go as?
Castor Troy.


xwingcrossing says: I love the way that you embody the characters that you play on screen, and where you get the inspiration to pay said characters. As a massive Vampire's Kiss fan, I am curious to find out where you got the inspiration to play Peter Loew? 
God bless my father, but he always spoke in this continental, literary accent, probably because he was a professor of comparative literature and he made the decision to speak with distinction. I never understood that growing up with him, but I always thought it sounded a bit humourous, so when I played a literary agent, it was my homage to my father's manner of speaking that I was referring to. On top of that I was inspired by Max Schreck's performance in the original Nosferatu and I was trying to find a way of playing a modern man who succumbs to his psychosis which manifests in my being able to play Max Schreck in Nosferatu.

Exclusive Nicolas Cage Webchat

Cage's Oscar-winning performance in Leaving Las Vegas


dgribble says: In Leaving Las Vegas, I’ve always been curious about how you managed to get your voice to sound exactly like a habitual alcoholic’s? It genuinely sounded like you’d been drinking your whole life!
Well, I saw three movies. One was Days Of Wine And Roses. One was Dudley Moore in Arthur. One was Albert Finney in Under The Volcano. When I saw Albert Finney, I had no doubt within two minutes that he was really drunk in the movie and that performance was a man who was really succumbing to the effects of alcohol. I think I was really inspired by his performance and that sound, and that may have had some effect on it.


terrence green says: I’m sure you have turned down films in the past, but is there one that you have thought "Damn, I wish I took it…"?
The only reason why I tend to pass on a movie is either I don't think I'm right for the material and can't play it honestly, or because of time constraints with personal things in my life. There were two movies that asked me to go to Australia or New Zealand for long periods of time. One was Lord Of The Rings and one was the Matrix. But I was actively involved at that time raising my family and I couldn't really take that time out.


cal_trask says: Are you still penning a book about your acting technique Nouveau Shamanic?
I am not currently writing a book about that. I'm at work on something else. I was invited to go to Ireland to have a Q&A with a group of thespians about this concept, but the truth is, like Brian Bates said, everybody who's an actor is already there; they just don't know it yet. This style, if you will, or programme, is really teaching how not to act, and how to utilise your dreams, power objects, even taking weekends to experiment with imagination and finding ways of infusing your performances with those experiences so that it's no longer acting but truth. Acting implies lying in some way - Olivier said as much in his autobiography, and I don't want to lie. Thankfully Sean Penn said that Nicolas Cage is no longer an actor, and that's what I want. I want to find a way to make it more truthful. This style is stimulating your imagination to be more truthful in the words and the movements.

I would like to say thanks to all of you Empire readers for spending a little time with me today, and thank you for watching!



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Team Cage

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Date: 3:13 PM, 01/27/12
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OMG!!! Lady A, you go girl! What a great question too!!

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Nic Warrior

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I absolutely loved the answers!!!   Especially the answer to Lady Roxanne's question,it is very interesting to know all those Nouveau Shamanic things the man did to create the Ghost Rider.flamingFantastic!!!

Congratulations on having your question answered by Sir Nicolas,Lady Roxanne!



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NIColicious Enchantress

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RE: Exclusive Nicolas Cage Webchat Today!
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Thanks for all your congrats!hug WOW! I am still overwhelmed by that NICvent! thud

Thanks Lula, for posting the transcript with all these NIComendous, NIColicious pics!multicolourlovemulticolourlovemulticolourlove He looks really happy! How wonderful!multicolourlove



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"When you think about magic, it is imagination plus willpower focused in such a way that you can create a conscious effect in the material world..."

Nicolas Cage




the mystery master

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Date: 6:24 PM, 01/27/12
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Thank you so much for posting this amazing transcript so we can all enjoy it. I felt sorry that it was the mods who has the precedence to choose the questions for Nic to answer, but it was their loss. Congrats to you Lady Roxanne, for the sake of your NICe question lol ,wonder you are still in raptures at reading this transcript? Nic is such a savvy polymath who has great literature at his fingertips, love the way he using quotes and allusions to support his arguement
That no one could argue with that Nic's raving high professionalism should be account for his being gone from success to success throughout his 30-yr awe-inspiring career in the movies. And we all fed by the overflow of the inestimable wealth of his spirit, for which i am grateful with my whole being. plz dont throw me stones for my spropositi.

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Faery Queen of Cagealot Castle

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I am still taking it all in, it was an honour to witness the man we all admire, responding to fan questions, live,  and with such detail, congruence and authenticity! starry

I agree with you all, as well as his acting genius, Sir Nicolas has a gift for spontaneous eloquence.. and as you say tues, such a wealth of knowledge and depth of interests to draw on and allude to.

There is so much that is intriguing here, but the parts that stood out for me are about acting and the truth...as far as acting goes, I would say Nic is one of the most truthful actors out there, but it excites me to think of him writing nad being closer to the primary source..the infinte file of creativity.whereas as an actor you are channeling the concept already in existence.

As a crystal lover this bit gave me an actual buzz to read:

On my costume, my leather jacket, I would sew in ancient, thousands-of-years-old Egyptian relics, and gather bits of tourmaline and onyx and would stuff them in my pockets to gather these energies together and shock my imagination into believing that I was augmented in some way by them, or in contact with ancient ghosts.




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Nic Newbie

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Date: 9:59 PM, 01/27/12
RE: Exclusive Nicolas Cage Webchat Today!
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have u thought about doing a ghost rider series ??? loved u in face off & ghost Rider can't wait till feb for second one to come out.

 


Mandy Weeks



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Faery Queen of Cagealot Castle

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Hi Mandy! welcome to Cagealot, welcome1 great to see you and thanks for jumping in and posting

The Empire webchat took place yesterday, this is the transcript posted here,  so unfortunately the event is over.... but we do have a thread HERE where we are just posting questions we would ike to ask Nic if ever the opportunity arose where someone on twitter for example is asking for fan questions, which has happened before! flowerface

 

You may also be interested in THIS INTERVIEW where Nic talks about a Ghost Rider TRILOGY! flaming



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Nicolicious

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Date: 8:31 AM, 01/28/12
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That was just glorious and had made me rather giddy for Ghost Rider! I loved that he engages so fully with even the most seemingly trivial of questions - like the sandwich one. That's the way to live for sure! :D

Also, Nic directed by a Japanese director like Hideo Nakata (who directed The Ring - imdb'd) would be fascinating. I'd love to see him work with Takashi Miike!!

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Nic-Lover

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Thanks Lula, very interesting as I already said but it is worth saying several times!! 



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Nicalicious

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RE: Exclusive Empire Nicolas Cage Webchat Transcript!
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This lady is discussing Nic's webchat, and she talks a lot about Roxanne's question and Nic's answer. ! Plus she is funny!

http://www.evilbeetgossip.com/2012/01/31/the-most-amazing-nicolas-cage-interview-you-will-ever-read/#more-100913

The Most Amazing Nicolas Cage Interview You Will Ever Read

Jan 31, 2012 at 03:30 pm by Jenn

A photo of Nicolas Cage

Adaptation was on HBO the other night, and I realized I’d forgotten what a versatile actor Nicolas Cage can be. Then Moonstruck came on right after, and I fell in love with him all over again. How could I have forgotten Leaving Las Vegas? Raising Arizona?

No, I know. It’s easy to forget to take him seriously, thanks to this supercut (NSFW) and that hairline.

Empire Magazine somehow convinced Nic to go live on a “webchat,” fielding questions from fans in real-time. I admit I have never laughed so hard in my life, yes, but now I have no doubt he is a mad genius.

I am not overselling when I call this the Most Amazing Nicolas Cage Interview You Will Ever Read, you guys. I have selected some of my favorite excerpts.

On what to watch during a Nic Cage triple-feature:

“I think the best way to have a trilogy of movies is to find ones that are diverse and provide a kind of counterpoint, so I would go Adaptation, Con Air and Bad Lieutenant.”

See, I liked my inadvertent Adaptation/Moonstruck double-bill, but I really like Nic’s suggestion, too. Very nice.

On whether he has ever regretted passing on a movie role:

“The only reason why I tend to pass on a movie is, either I don’t think I’m right for the material and can’t play it honestly, or because of time constraints with personal things in my life. There were two movies that asked me to go to Australia or New Zealand for long periods of time. One was Lord of the Rings and one was The Matrix.”

On whether he’d like to cinematically revisit any of his characters:

“I would like to hook up with one of the great Japanese filmmakers, like the master that made Ringu, and I would like to take The Wicker Man to Japan, except this time he’s a ghost.”

OH MY GOD.

Someone named Roxanne wonders what it was like to play the dual characters of John Blaze/Ghost Rider.

And oh, boy, Roxanne. In asking this question you really must have tapped into something deep inside Nicolas Cage:

It was the first time that I played Ghost Rider. Blaze was easy; I knew he was a man who had been living with a curse for eight years of having his head lit on fire, and the tone that would take. I compared him to a cop, or a paramedic who develops a dark sense of humor to cope with the horrors he has seen. But Blaze has also caused the horrors, so he’s hiding out because he doesn’t want to hurt anyone else.

Ghost Rider was an entirely new experience, and he got me thinking about something I read in a book called The Way Of Wyrd by Brian Bates, and he also wrote a book called The Way Of The Actor. He put forth the concept that all actors, whether they know it or not, stem from thousands of years ago—pre-Christian times—when they were the medicine men or shamans of the village. And these shamans, who by today’s standards would be considered psychotic, were actually going into flights of the imagination and locating answers to problems within the village. They would use masks or rocks or some sort of magical object that had power to it.

It occurred to me, because I was doing a character as far out of our reference point as the spirit of vengeance, I could use these techniques. I would paint my face with black and white make up to look like a Afro-Caribbean icon called Baron Samedi, or an Afro-New Orleans icon who is also called Baron Saturday. He is a spirit of death but he loves children; he’s very lustful, so he’s a conflict in forces. And I would put black contact lenses in my eyes so that you could see no white and no pupil, so I would look more like a skull or a white shark on attack.

On my costume, my leather jacket, I would sew in ancient, thousands-of-years-old Egyptian relics, and gather bits of tourmaline and onyx and would stuff them in my pockets to gather these energies together and shock my imagination into believing that I was augmented in some way by them, or in contact with ancient ghosts. I would walk on the set looking like this, loaded with all these magical trinkets, and I wouldn’t say a word to my co-stars or crew or directors. I saw the fear in their eyes, and it was like oxygen to a forest fire. I believed I was the Ghost Rider.

OH MY GOD. Nicolas Cage is a total “method” actor—except his “method” is “channeling ancient voodoo spirits” and “sewing mystical totems into his clothing” and “tapping into gnostic nativistic preknowledge” using “ancient shamanic ritual.” HOLY s***.

I think I had begun to wonder whether Nic Cage accepts dumb scripts and just “phones it in” for a paycheck, so to speak. No way. This guy is a maniac! Like if you caught him dancing naked in the moonlight and you were like “Hey Nicolas Cage what are you doing,” he’d be all, “I’m researching a part, obviously.”



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the mystery master

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Date: 6:06 PM, 03/14/12
RE: Exclusive Empire Nicolas Cage Webchat Transcript!
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What an absolutely awesome find, thank you Lady T. She is an alien beingcooooooolalienI'd love to hear more from that Lady's comments on Nic's other interviews. Thanks for posting again!

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Faery Queen of Cagealot Castle

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Date: 2:02 AM, 03/15/12
RE: Exclusive Empire Nicolas Cage Webchat Transcript!
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Cool find Lady T!

Yes, It does seem Nic returned wholeheartedly to the method for Spirit Of Vengeance!flaming



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NIColicious Enchantress

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Date: 3:27 AM, 03/15/12
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Wow! What a awesome interview! Great, to read his amazing answer again! :) Thanks for posting it, Lady T.! :)

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"When you think about magic, it is imagination plus willpower focused in such a way that you can create a conscious effect in the material world..."

Nicolas Cage


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