Tuesday, November 7, 2023

Face/Off (1997) - Review


Face/Off is a 1997 action film directed by legendary director John Woo starring Nicolas Cage and John Travolta as the dueling antagonists Castor Troy and Sean Archer, respectively. After a personal manhunt following the murder of his son, FBI special agent Sean Archer finally nabs international criminal extraordinaire Castor Troy, a man on Archer's radar far before his involvement in the aforementioned killing. Archer is tasked with going undercover as Troy as the FBI is made aware that there is a lingering bomb threat for the city of Los Angeles from Troy that he cannot be any assistance in solving; Archer undergoes a revolutionary plastic surgery and voice modulation to assume the identity of a comatose Castor Troy to ferret the necessary information out of Troy's coconspirators. Unfortunately for Archer, Troy wakes from his coma during this mission and violently assumes the identity of Archer through the same surgery process. The two men continue their feud, now with their roles reversed; the prey has now become the hunter, and vice versa.

Face/Off has always been my favorite Nic Cage movie, if not one of my favorite movies of all time. Each line and visual cue is packed with symbolism that is all addressed by the conclusion of the film. This might seem very concerning knowing that the runtime is just over two hours, but every minute is active. Any second that could have been wasted is left on the cutting room floor, which serves to keep the audience's attention. The setting shows the limits of its timelessness, with the only thing taking me out of the suspension of disbelief I usually try hard to suspend myself being the technology systems that the director and producers thought was so cutting edge, if not trying to forecast what unrealized technology might look like. Otherwise, the story never failed to keep me enthralled each and every scene. I would be remiss to wait any longer to discuss the performances of not only Cage and Travolta, but everyone else as well. The conceit of the actors having to swap each other's characters; trying to figure out how Cage would portray Travolta's Archer trying to mimic Cage's Castor Troy and vice versa is such a monumental feat of acting that actors without distinct personalities and tics would have a difficult time achieving. The range of acting that they would also have to engage with is also a monumental task. It is not only an achievement to cast two actors who each have unique personas, but that those actors can emulate each other is the other side of that monumental accomplishment. The performances of everyone else involved is equally astonishing, having to inhabit their characters enough to show the appropriate confusion by the incongruities that happen after the main switch occurs.

I watched this with my wife and one of my oldest friends. Usually I would have to fight to maintain my wife's attention during a Nic Cage movie, but this film captured her attention once she realized that the high status I attributed earlier in this review was not just a flippant statement. We all had a good time watching this movie, especially when I realized that I was to write a review for this project. I highly recommend that anyone interested in the body of work of Nic Cage would go out and watch this film, if not own it for your own personal collection. You still get the crazy Nic Cage that some of us have come to expect and enjoy, but you also have the zaniness of John Travolta shining through. All of that wrapped in a highly stylized packaged that can only be presented by John Woo.

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