Next up on the 31 Days Of Hell roster, the Nicolas Cage movie Vampire's Kiss.
![]() |
"Are you laughing at my straight to video career of the last few years? Tell me. Are you? |
Peter Loew (Nicolas Cage) is a mentally ill literary
agent whose existence consists of work, the night club life of hookups and
daily sessions with his therapist.
During a one night stand, Peter is bitten in the neck by a woman who
appears to be a vampire (Jennifer Beals from Flashdance). Believing he’s
transforming into a bloodsucker himself as a result, the already somewhat
unhinged Loew’s behavior grows increasingly erratic and madcap, setting the
stage for Cage to swallow his scenes whole with overacting that has to be seen to
be believed. By now, clips of the film
out of context have become popular on the internet, notably a scene where he
rants about alphabetical filing of documents in his office. Cage starts reciting the alphabet before he’s
foaming at the mouth, making bizarre facial gestures and punching into the air
with clenched fists. In another scene,
Cage runs frantically through the slums of New York at night, screaming
repeatedly that he’s a vampire with passerby barely noticing given how much
madness is commonplace to them.
In context, the Cage-tastic scenery chomping actually
works, functioning as a counterpoint to the stability of the other characters
who grow to fear the psychopath including a subplot where his harassment of his
secretary Alva (Maria Conchita Alonso from The
Running Man) becomes more sinister as time goes by. Vampire’s
Kiss in microcosm also serves as a loose metaphor for all-consuming night
life indulgence. Much like Patrick
Bateman of American Psycho, Peter
Loew’s materialistic and possessive desires cannot be fulfilled before self-loathing
and violence ensues. Understandably, the
low budget hunk of snark performed poorly at the box office and didn’t fare
well with critics either who took umbrage with Cage’s ludicrously over the top
performance. In the years since, the
film has gained a cult following and was released on Blu-Ray recently by Scream
Factory. While neither really a horror
film nor a straightforward comedy, Vampire’s
Kiss will provide plenty of laughs for just how insane Nicolas Cage gets in
this. In the pantheon of yuppie excess
movies, Vampire’s Kiss more than
fulfills its obligations as a comic opera of self-destructive indulgence. Fans of the unabashed Cage-tastic will get
more than their money’s worth!
Score
-Andrew Kotwicki
Share this review, blood sucker!