Nicolas Cage has said, “There’s a very fine line between Method actor and schizophrenic.” In Werner Herzog’s Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans , he teeters that line maniacally, with an ever-increasing slur and crooked swagger. Cage plays Terence McDonagh, a detective in post-Katrina New Orleans investigating a drug-related murder and his personal threshold for cocaine and heroin. The first news of Bad Lieutenant was puzzling: famously extreme director Werner Herzog re-imagining a 1992 cult movie, also called Bad Lieutenant , but shifting the action to New Orleans and casting Nic Cage in the Harvey Keitel role opposite his Ghost Rider costar Eva Mendes. Weird. But in fact, Bad Lieutenant is Herzog’s second surprisingly accessible movie in as many years, following 2007’s Rescue Dawn . And Cage is brilliant in a role seemingly made for him, so read more. The noirish, pulpy, desperate, and often hilarious film opens with a good deed: McDonagh dives into a Katrina-flooded jail cell to save a prisoner’s life, in the process injuring his back and subsequently getting hooked on Vicodin and then far

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Bad Lieutenant: Good Cop Gone Nuts