|
|
אודות הסרטים
|
|
|
Electric God (2007)
A man who lives a life of
isolation finds a solution to his violent temper when he's forced
to reach out to others.
|
|
National Treasure 2 (2007)
Jon Turteltaub
|
|
Time Share (2006)
When two families are booked for
the same time share, both fathers (Nicolas Cage and Will Smith)
square off against one another.
|
|
Amarillo Slim (2006)
Milos Forman
|
|
September 11 Project (2006)
Two Port Authority police officers
become trapped under the rubble of the World Trade Center.
Oliver Stone
|
|
Ant Bully (2006)
After Lucas Nickle floods an ant
colony with his watergun, he's magically shrunken down to insect
size and sentenced to hard labor in the ruins.
|
|
Next
(2006)
A man can see the future and
change events before they happen. Eventually, he is forced to
choose between saving the world and saving himself.
|
|
Ghost
Rider (2006)
A motorcycle stuntman, Johnny
Blaze, makes a pact with a dark force, selling his soul to save
his girlfriend. When the bargain goes sour and the girl isn't
saved, Blaze is transformed, gaining raging superpowers.
|
|
|
Lord
of War (2005)
A wily arms dealer dodges bullets
and betrayal as he schemes his way to the top of his profession,
only to come face to face with his conscience. But it's not easy
to leave a life of girls, guns and glamour when nobody wants you
to stop, not even your enemies
|
|
|
The
Weather Man (2005)
Popular Chicago weatherman, Dave
Spirtz, has a shot at the big time when a national morning
television show calls him for an audition. Professionally, Dave is
on top of the world, but his personal life is in complete
disarray. Dave's painful divorce, his dad's illness and trouble
with his kids have him poised on the knife's edge between
stability and disaster. The harder he tries to control events, the
more he finds life, like the weather, is completely unpredictable.
|
|
|
National
Treasure (2004)
Action/Adventure
2 hrs. 25 min. All
his life, Benjamin Franklin Gates (Nicolas Cage) has been
searching for a treasure no one believed existed: amassed through
the ages, moved across continents, to become the greatest treasure
the world has ever known. Hidden by our Founding Fathers, they
left clues to the treasure's location right before our eyes...
from our nation's birthplace, to the nation's capitol, to clues
buried within the symbols on the dollar bill. In a race against
time, Gates must elude the FBI, stay one step ahead of his
ruthless adversary (Sean Bean), decipher the remaining clues and
unlock the 2000 year-old mystery behind our greatest national
treasure.
|
|
|
Matchstick
Men (2003)
Comedy, Drama
and Crime/Gangster
1 hr. 56 min. Phobia-addled
con artist Roy (Cage) and his protיgי Frank (Rockwell)
are on the verge of pulling off a lucrative swindle when the
unexpected arrival of Roy’s teenage daughter Angela (Lohman)
disrupts his carefully-ordered life and jeopardizes his high-risk
scam.
|
|
|
Adaptation
(2002)
Comedy and
Drama
1 hr. 54 min. The
academy award nominated creators of Being John Malkovich take you
on another head trip. Starring Nicolas Cage, Meryl Streep, Chris
Cooper, and Tilda Swinton, this is a fascinating
"adaptation" of the off-beat book "The Orchid
Thief."
|
|
|
Windtalkers
(2002)
Action/Adventure
and Drama
2 hrs. 14 min. On
December 8, 1941, the United States declared war on Japan. For the
next several years, U.S. forces were fully engaged in battle
throughout the Pacific, taking over islands one by one in a slow
progression towards mainland Japan. During this brutal campaign,
the Japanese were continually able to break coded military
transmissions, dramatically slowing U.S. progress. In 1942,
several hundred Navajo Americans were recruited as Marines and
trained to use their language as code. Marine Joe Enders is
assigned to protect Ben Yahzee - a Navajo code talker, the
Marines' new secret weapon. Enders' orders are to protect his code
talker, but if Yahzee should fall into enemy hands, he's to
"protect the code at all costs." Against the backdrop of
the horrific Battle of Saipan, when capture is imminent, Enders is
forced to make a decision: if he can't protect his fellow Marine,
can he bring himself to kill him to protect the code?
|
|
|
Captain
Corelli's Mandolin (2001)
Drama and
Romance
2 hrs. 25 min. The
idyllic beauty of Greece's Mediterranean coast has been invaded by
Italy, bringing legions of soldiers to the once tranquil island of
Cephallonia. Captain Antonio Corelli (Nicolas Cage), an officer
with an irrepressibly jovial personality and passion for the
mandolin, initially alienates a number of the villagers, including
Pelagia (Penelope Cruz). The daughter of the village doctor,
Pelagia is an educated and strong-willed woman, and while at first
offended by the Italian soldier's behavior, she slowly warms to
his certain charms as they are forced to share her father's home.
|
|
|
The
Family Man (2000)
Comedy and
Romance
2 hrs. 05 min. A
single Wall Street businessman, Jack Campbell (Nicholas Cage),
wakes up one morning and finds that his identity has completely
changed: He is now a happily married man living in the suburbs
with his wife and two children. THE FAMILY MAN, directed by Brett
Ratner, is a compassionate Christmas story about a man who must
choose between a fast-paced career life or a loving family life.
|
|
|
Gone
in 60 Seconds (2000)
Action/Adventure
1 hr. 59 min. Gone
in Sixty Seconds is about automobile aficionado Randall
"Memphis" Raines, a car thief of legendary proportion.
No fancy lock or alarm could stop him; your car would be there,
and then suddenly gone in 60 seconds. For years, Memphis eluded
the law while boosting every make and model imaginable. When the
heat became too intense, he abandoned his life of crime and left
everything and everyone he loved to find a different life. Now,
when his kid brother tries to follow in his footsteps, only to
become dangerously embroiled in a high stakes caper, Memphis is
sucked back into his old ways-in order to save his brother's life.
|
|
|
8MM
(1999)
Thriller
Cage plays
Tom Welles, a straight-laced surveillance specialist. His
innocent, naive world begins to unravel when he is hired by the
widow of an industrialist to investigate what she has shockingly
discovered in her late husband's safe. It appears to be a snuff
film of a young girl being murdered. In order to discover the
truth, he must enter the city's seedy underworld, guided by
porn-store clerk Phoenix.
|
|
|
Bringing
Out the Dead (1999)
Drama and
Thriller
Martin
Scorsese exhilaratingly adapts Joe Connelly’s novel about Frank
(Nicolas Cage), a paramedic working among the filth and mental
desolation of New York City's Hell's Kitchen in the early 1990s.
Lately he has been haunted by the visions of a beautiful 18
year-old girl whom he was unable to resuscitate. Soon after,
another image begins to torment him, that of Mary (Patricia
Arquette), a recovering drug addict who enters Frank's life when
he attempts to save her father. His spiral into even further
confusion is paralleled with his three driving partners: Larry (a
boisterous John Goodman), whose advice to Frank is not to think
about all the death and violence; Marcus (a scene-stealing Ving
Rhames), a religious fanatic who uses his medical skills as
propaganda for the Lord; and Walls (a maniacal Tom Sizemore), a
loose cannon who has no sensible grounding whatsoever. In order to
escape the madness that is consuming him, Frank asks,
unsuccessfully, to be fired. He must ride out the nightmare,
trying to redeem the lives of Rose, Mary, and himself in the
process. Scorsese uses his camera to capture Frank’s wavering
mental state with tilted angles and fast-speed photography. In
portraying the tormented Frank, Cage dives wholeheartedly into
character, delivering another fiery performance.
|
|
|
City
of Angels (1998)
Romance
1 hr. 50 min. What
happens when an angel falls in love with a mortal? In this
Hollywoodized version of Wim Wenders' "Wings of an
Angel," the romance is as longing and deferred as it was in
"Sleepless in Seattle."
|
|
|
Snake
Eyes (1998)
Thriller
1 hr. 47 min. While
attending a heavy weight boxing match with his old friend, now
security chief to the Secretary of Defense (Gary Sinese), Atlantic
City detective Sontoro (Nicolas Cage) takes on a huge case when
the Secretary of Defense is assassinated. Suddenly 14,000 fans
become suspects, witnesses, possibly accomplices.
|
|
|
Con
Air (1997)
Action/Adventure
Nothing
makes good-guy non-recidivist offender Cameron Poe happier than
the thought of returning to society, where his angelic wife and
the equally angelic little girl he's never known are waiting. And
nothing makes him angrier than the passel of psychopathic
murderers and rapists aboard his prison transport
plane--especially when, under the direction of ringleader Cyrus
"The Virus" Grissom, they revolt and hijack their own
plane. Fortunately, our hero's been trained by the Army as an
elite one-man-fighting-machine, and a dogged Justice Department
agent waits on the ground to help him bring the fanatical fly-boys
in for a bloody crash landing--in Vegas! A hyperactive Molotov
cocktail blended from the frenetic efforts of high-octane action
producer Jerry Bruckheimer ("The Rock"), hipster-schtick
screenwriting specialist Scott Rosenberg, and music video director
West. Academy Award Nominations: 2, including Best Original Song
("How Do I Live"), and Best Sound.
|
|
|
Face/Off
(1997)
Thriller
2 hrs. 30 min. FBI
agent obsessed with the murder of his son trades faces with the
boy's killer. High-style, large-caliber action from the master,
John Woo, who keeps a thoroughly insane story on an even keel
aaaaaalllllmost till the end.
|
|
|
The
Rock (1996)
Action/Adventure
In Michael
Bay's THE ROCK, gung-ho general Francis Hummel (Ed Harris), armed
with deadly chemical rockets and aided by violent cohorts, takes
over the island of Alcatraz, holding 81 tourists hostage. Hummel
promises to deploy the missiles over San Francisco if Washington
doesn't make amends to ignored combat victims to the tune of $100
million. A cadre of Navy SEALs are dispatched to quell the
situation, assisted by the mysterious, macho John Mason (Sean
Connery), the only man to ever escape from Alcatraz, who must now
help the SEALs break back in. Joining them is mild-mannered
chemical weapons expert Stanley Goodspeed (Nicolas Cage), who is
unaccustomed to such things as guns and military maneuvers. Their
high-octane mission is filled with surprises, particularly after
Hummel and company quickly annihilate the SEALs--leaving Mason and
Goodspeed to save the day all by themselves.
|
|
|
Kiss
of Death (1995)
Drama and
Crime/Gangster
KISS OF
DEATH opens with ex-convict Jimmy Kilmartin (David Caruso)
attempting to distance himself from his shady past. His cousin,
Ronny (Michael Rapaport), shows up at his door begging for help
with one more heist, and Jimmy agrees to participate against his
better judgment. Things go sour when a detective is shot, and
Jimmy is left to take the fall. As Jimmy's hopes for a normal life
with his wife (Helen Hunt) and daughter fade, he becomes a pawn of
the police in their attempts to bring down a psychotic gangster
named Little Junior (Nicolas Cage).
Caruso and a pumped-up, supremely menacing Cage highlight a
spectacular cast that also features Samuel L. Jackson as the cop
who becomes Jimmy's solitary ally and Stanley Tucci as a
Machiavellian district attorney. Novelist Richard Price supplies
the screenplay, and director Barber Schroeder (SINGLE WHITE
FEMALE) ensures that KISS OF DEATH, based loosely on the 1947 film
of the same name, unfolds with the grooved precision of a
well-made watch while bristling at every turn with the volatile
life of a vividly imagined criminal underworld.
|
|
|
Leaving
Las Vegas (1995)
Drama
With
LEAVING LAS VEGAS, director Mike Figgis spun critical gold out of
what would appear to be a maudlin and hackneyed premise--a
down-and-out drunk meets a hooker with a heart of gold. The reason
for the film's success lies partly in its refusal to moralize, but
mostly it is the strong performances of Nicholas Cage and
Elisabeth Shue that make the story believable and poignant. Ben
Sanderson (Cage) is a Hollywood screenwriter who has become an
alcoholic. After being fired, he takes his severance pay to Las
Vegas, where he plans to drink himself to death. There he meets
Sera (Shue), a streetwise prostitute who responds both to Ben's
wild antics and to his absolute gentleness. What Sera needs most
is to be needed, and Ben needs her a lot. Figgis uses his whole
bag of tricks--Sera talks to the camera, the exteriors are shot in
grainy 16mm--but finally it is the perfectly-conceived
relationship between these two wounded people that drew the rave
reviews. The film was based on a novel by John O'Brien.
|
|
|
Guarding
Tess (1994)
Comedy
A sad-sack
Secret Service agent is assigned to protect a feisty former First
Lady in this comic look at an oddball relationship. If they
weren't so busy fighting with each other, they might just be
friends.
|
|
|
It
Could Happen to You (1994)
Comedy
When a New
York police officer offers half of a lottery ticket as a tip for a
waitress in a diner, the gratuity ends up being worth over $2
million in this wacky romantic comedy.
|
|
|
Trapped
in Paradise (1994)
Comedy
Bill Firpo
(Nicholas Cage) is trying to stay straight, but at the behest of
his brothers Dave, played by John Lovitz, and Alvin (Dana Carvey),
he agrees to help out on a bank robbery which they assure him
cannot go wrong. Dave and Alvin have recently gotten out of jail,
and the poorly guarded bank in the small town of Paradise,
Pennsylvania, provides an opportunity for easy money they just
can't pass up. The robbery proves successful, but they don't
manage to beat the huge snowstorm out of town; snowed in with
their loot, they are taken in by the unwitting townspeople they've
just robbed, who give new meaning to the phrase "killing with
kindness!"
|
|
|
Amos
& Andrew (1993)
Comedy
A Pulitzer
Prize-winning black playwright is mistaken for a thief when he
moves into his new home on an exclusive new England resort island.
Enter a career criminal and incorrigible wiseguy who's got one
chance to get out of jail: just save the corrupt police chief's
job by breaking into the playwright's house, taking him hostage
and then giving up.
|
|
|
Deadfall
(1993)
Drama
A father
and son team of con artists set up a scam so elaborate and
byzantine even they are not entirely certain who's side everyone's
on. A very entertaining ride of twists and turns.
|
|
|
Red
Rock West (1993)
Drama
Michael is
on his way to Wyoming in a vintage Cadillac, where he's been
promised a good steady job. But before reaching his destination,
he finds himself in the town of Red Rock, where he's mistaken for
a hired assassin by Wayne, a bartender plotting to kill his wife.
Wayne flaunts a lucrative offer in Michael's face, which the
down-and-out Michael can't resist; he accepts the money and goes
along with the plan. Michael meets Wayne's wife face-to-face, but
when she doubles the original offer, Michael leaves town. Just to
be on the safe side, however, he leaves the sheriff a note
explaining everything.
On the road again, he crashes into another motorist. When the
police arrive, Michael discovers Wayne is the local sheriff.
Before it's all over, he's got to clear his name, come up with the
money, and get out of Red Rock, which is a lot harder than it
sounds. John Dahl's noir black comedy is an absolute joy to watch.
|
|
|
Honeymoon
in Vegas (1992)
Comedy
Before
Jack and Betsy take the plunge to become man and wife, Jack loses
her in a poker game. In a wild, love-crazed pursuit to win her
back, Jack flies from Vegas to Hawaii and then back to Vegas again
hitching a return flight with the "Flying Elvises" (a
group of sky-diving Elvis impersonators).
|
|
|
Zandalee
(1991)
Drama
Sam
Pillsbury (KNIGHT RIDER 2010) directs this steamy Bayou drama
about how poor, sex starved Zandalee has an affair with her
husband's boyhood friend, Johnny (Nicolas Cage). You see,
Zandalee's husband (Judge Reinhold) used to turn her on when he
was a poet, but he wasn't a very good poet and now he's a business
man and has no time for sex. Enter Johnny, and we have ourselves
an extramarital affair. Strangely, both Judge Reinhold and Cage
have mustaches in this film. I think that means something.
|
|
|
Fire
Birds (1990)
Action/Adventure
When an
international enemy turns to high-tech weaponry, the U.S. Army
enlists the aid of the Apaches - America's elite airborne task
force specially trained for aerial assault. Flying the world's
most advanced attack helicopters, these hotshot Fire Birds battle
an evasive foe.
|
|
|
Time
to Kill (1990)
Drama
A painful
toothache becomes the catalyst for a series of bizarre events when
a young soldier abandons his African camp in search of a dentist.
Instead he finds an oasis with an African woman, but their
passionate encounter ends when she is killed by one of his stray
bullets. He covers up his crime only to realize she may have
infected him with leprosy.
|
|
|
Wild
at Heart (1990)
Drama
In
adapting Barry Gifford’s colorful novel, David Lynch delivers
another jolt of adrenaline to unsuspecting viewers everywhere.
WILD AT HEART follows the troubled romance of Sailor (Nicolas
Cage) and Lula (Laura Dern), two lovers who struggle to remain
together even when fate seems intent on keeping them apart. In
this case, fate is Lula’s mother, Marietta Fortune (Diane Ladd),
a desperate woman who hates Sailor and will do anything to keep
him away from her daughter. After Sailor is released from prison
for murdering a man--albeit in self-defense--he and Lula embark on
a sex-filled, rocking road trip, aware that they are being hunted
by one of Marietta’s cronies. When they pull off the road in
order to hide out in a small trailer park, Sailor befriends Bobby
Peru (Willem Dafoe), an incredibly intense war veteran with a
rotten set of teeth. Bobby convinces Sailor to help him rob a
bank, much to Lula’s objections (for she has discovered that she
is pregnant). Sailor must decide if he wants to go straight and be
there for his child or remain under Bobby’s influence and risk
returning to jail. Lynch’s raucous film contains his trademark
visual style, over-the-top dialogue, and pulsating soundtrack,
creating another truly distinct picture.
|
|
|
Vampire's
Kiss (1989)
Comedy
Nicolas
Cage plays Peter Loew, a sleazy literary agent who prowls the bars
in the evening looking for some action. One night he hooks up with
Jennifer Beals, and in the course of their relations, she bites
him on the neck. When he wakes up the next morning, Peter doesn't
feel quite right. He is irritable, and has a hard time dealing
with life at the literary agency, where his secretary takes the
brunt of his ire. Suddenly, it dawns on Peter that he was bitten
by a vampire, so he goes out and buys a set of real fangs.
However, mere plot exposition can't begin to get at what makes
this movie so incredible. Well, the film itself isn't really
incredible, it's Cage's performance. Here, it seems, he was given
free rein to act like a total madman. There is absolutely no
precedent for this performance anywhere in film history, and Cage
is a wonder to watch. Though this film is usually only mentioned
when people want to talk about how Cage ate a live cockroach once
because he insisted on absolute realism, his performance here
dwarfs everything else he's ever done. The movie might be rather
silly, what with its rather pretentious device of using Peter's
transformation into a vampire as a metaphor for his other life as
a parasitic literary agent and lady-killer, but Cage overacts so
stunningly that you can't take your eyes off the film for a
second.
|
|
|
Moonstruck
(1987)
Comedy
In this
glowingly atmospheric comedy, a young Italian-American woman,
bitter after having been widowed by a speeding bus, makes a
practical decision to marry a longtime friend for stability and
security, even though her feelings for him are tepid at best. But
when she falls in love with her fiance's estranged one-handed
younger brother, screwball sparks fly. Great, subtle performances
and a warm regard for the film's Bronx milieu highlight the film.
Academy Award Nominations: 6, including Best Picture, Best
Director. Academy Awards: 3, including Best Actress--Cher, Best
Supporting Actress--Olympia Dukakis, and Best Original Screenplay.
|
|
|
Raising
Arizona (1987)
A childless couple
unable to adopt decide that a couple who just had quintuplets
won't mind if they steal one of the babies. Thus begins the Coen
brothers' madcap romp RAISING ARIZONA. Holly Hunter stars as Ed, a
cop who is devastated when she learns that she cannot get
pregnant. Nicolas Cage is her husband, H.I., an ex-con who wants
nothing more than to make his wife the happiest woman in the
world. So if she wants a baby, she's going to have a baby, one way
or another.
Heading up the supporting cast of bizarre characters are John
Goodman and William Forsythe as crazy cousins who have just busted
out of prison, Sam McMurray and Frances McDormand as Ed and H.I.'s
swinging friends, and Randall "Tex" Cobb as a motorcycle
madman hired to rescue the baby. RAISING ARIZONA is the Coen
brothers' most consistently funny film. Carter Burwell's score,
replete with infectious yodeling, is relentless, Barry
Sonnenfeld's cinematography is beautifully wacky, and the manic
dialogue is the brothers' most quotable. The film is a treat for
the ears and the eyes, a one-of-a-kind sensation from a marvelous
pair of filmmakers.
|
|
|
The
Boy in Blue (1986)
Drama
Romantic
racing drama about one of Canada's great sports heroes,
world-class rower Ned Hanlan.
|
|
|
Peggy
Sue Got Married (1986)
Comedy
A charming
twist on the Rip van Winkle fairy tale, PEGGY SUE GOT MARRIED
tells the story of Peggy Sue Bodell (Kathleen Turner), a
43-year-old wife and mother who, while attending her high school
reunion, faints and wakes up back in 1960. Peggy Sue lives with
her mom and dad, attends high school, and dates her future husband
(Nicolas Cage). Will knowing what her future holds make Peggy Sue
change her life while she has the chance? Kathleen Turner received
a well-deserved Oscar nomination for her role as a middle-aged
woman encountering the problems of a teen.
|
|
|
Birdy
(1984)
Drama
In Alan
Parker's adaptation of William Wharton's acclaimed novel, the
title character is a Vietnam vet hospitalized for postwar trauma.
Lying in a state of amentia, Birdy (Matthew Modine) fantasizes
about birds in flight, an obsession that has haunted him since
childhood. Now this fascination acts as a barrier to reality and
the pain of his years in Vietnam. After doctors’ efforts fail to
cure him, his childhood friend Al (Nicolas Cage)--also a
discharged soldier nursing wounds from the war--is brought in to
try to coax Birdy out of his hallucinations.
BIRDY, told largely in stark, lyrical flashbacks from Al's point
of view, is both a heartrending examination of the psychological
consequences of war and an ode to the spiritually rejuvenating
powers of friendship and imagination. The two young leads turn in
powerful, humane performances. Parker (MIDNIGHT EXPRESS) provides
innovative direction, most notably in the film's stunning,
controversial ending.
|
|
|
The
Cotton Club (1984)
Drama and
Crime/Gangster
Beautiful
music and striking dance performances are the highlight of Francis
Ford Coppola’s musical/mobster flick centered around the
legendary Harlem nightclub. The club’s black dancers and
musicians entertain the exclusively white audience made up of
gangsters and Hollywood stars. Local boy Dixie Dwyer (Richard Gere)
saves the life of crime boss Dutch Schultz (James Remar) and
reluctantly enters the world of racketeering. Talented tap dancer
Sandman Williams (Gregory Hines) struggles to get ahead in the
segregated world of 1920s nightlife. Authentic costuming and sets
help make THE COTTON CLUB a stylistic homage to the Jazz Age and
gangster films of old.
|
|
|
Racing
With the Moon (1984)
Drama
Two young
men enjoy the last days of their boyhood before enlisting in the
military during the time of the Second World War. A tender,
bittersweet tale of lost innocence and the horrible trauma of
social violence.
|
|
|
Valley
Girl (1983)
Comedy
It's a
"totally tubular" scene as a "grody-to-the-max"
punk from the wrong side of the Hollywood Hills, Randy (Nicolas
Cage), falls for Julie (Deborah Foreman), a mall dwelling Valley
Girl, in this time capsule of 1980s teen vernacular. Julie and
Randy become passionately involved; yet, despite her feelings for
Randy, Julie succumbs to the peer pressure of her mall obsessed
friends, and gets back together with her Valley dude boyfriend,
Tommy (Michael Bowen), who whisks Julie off to the Senior prom.
Randy doesn't give up so easily, however, and chases Julie to the
prom, with the help of his faithful friend, Fred (Cameron Dye), in
an attempt to wrest her back. The sound track features the music
of Men at Work, The Clash, and Josie Cotton in this 1980s teen
comedy--an era, and topic, that director Coolidge was fond of
chronicling, like her contemporary, John Hughes.
|
|
|
Fast
Times at Ridgemont High (1982)
Comedy
Nascent
filmmaker and then-Rolling Stone journalist Cameron Crowe went
undercover in a southern California high school to document the
hilarious hijinx of teens in the 1980s. Director Amy Heckerling
turned his book into a classic teen comedy--equal parts sex,
stoners, sensitivity, and satire. Many of the young cast--most
notably, Sean Penn and Jennifer Jason Leigh--went on to Hollywood
fame. A milestone in '80s teen flicks.
|
|
|
|
|