30 Years Later, Nicolas Cage’s Stellar Action Thriller Still Hasn’t Been Topped



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On paper, The Rock doesn’t necessarily sound like a movie we’d be celebrating 30 years later. Released in 1996, The Rock centers on a rogue Marine general (Ed Harris) who seizes control of Alcatraz with some of his men, threatening to attack San Francisco with chemical weapons unless compensation and proper honors are given to the families of soldiers who have died under his command. Nicolas Cage and Sean Connery play two of the people assigned to stop him — an FBI scientist and a British spy who has successfully escaped the notorious prison in the past, respectively. It’s a straightforward script that almost feels like Hollywood playing into its worst impulses. However, it is in the execution where The Rock really shines, creating something that stands alongside Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Heat, and The Matrix as one of the defining action movies of the modern blockbuster era.

It’s hard to say whether The Rock would as well as it does if not for the strong work by Cage, Connery, and Harris in the lead roles, but the three actors uplift this film above what one might think of it by reading just a plot summary. All together, it’s 1990s action film-making at its purest, with the cast fully embracing the cliché nature of the film’s plot, while also knowing when to focus on the moments that demand seriousness. By fusing these performances with stylized action, humor, and drama, The Rock feels timeless.

The Cast of ‘The Rock’ Elevates It Beyond a Clichéd Action Thriller

In The Rock, Cage portrays Dr. Stanley Goodspeed, a neurotic FBI biochemist who is brilliant in a lab but utterly hopeless when thrust into the field. Paired with Cage is Connery, who plays John Mason, a former British spy who has been locked up in prison for decades after being caught stealing US intelligence, and is the only man to ever break out of Alcatraz alive. They make for the perfect odd couple, with each bringing their own flair to the character that balances the other perfectly. Connery’s dry wit paired with Cage’s manic energy creates one of the most entertaining action duos of the decade. Even during quiet moments in between gunfire and explosions, the conversations remain engaging because these two actors are getting the best from one another, and you can feel it.

13 years after his last James Bond film, Connery is still channeling his iconic spy character, making even the most rudimentary exposition-laced dialogue into something more. He does this so well and with such charm that it’s led to some fan theories that the Mason character is actually James Bond himself. Meanwhile, Cage’s Stanley Goodspeed is anything but calm, cool and collected. Given that his expertise is in test tubes rather than guns, he panics, makes mistakes, and in contrast to Connery, spends much of the film simply trying to survive. Cage leans into his neuroses, and helps create a protagonist that we latch onto not just for his intelligence, but also because he is the audience surrogate.

On the flip side, there is Ed Harris’ General Francis X. Hummel. Harris portrays Hummel with a quiet dignity, rather than as a cartoonish villain, providing a nice counterbalance to Connery and Cage. Hummel’s circumstances are tragic and his goals noble, though his methods are indefensible. As a career soldier, one who has pulled the trigger and killed many times before, he does not relish violence. Rather, he is a product of his violence, and much of the film revolves around him being increasingly reluctant to carry out his threat. Harris’s brilliant portrayal of the film’s moral conflict is what sets The Rock apart and gives it an emotional complexity not seen in other movies of its genre.

‘The Rock’ Understands That Action Movies Should Be Fun

Nicolas Cage as Stanley Goodspeed holding the bioweapon in The Rock
Nicolas Cage as Stanley Goodspeed in The Rock.
Image via Hollywood Pictures

Despite the heavy thematic elements present throughout, The Rock knows that, at its heart, it is an action movie designed to see the good guys win and the bad guys lose. The screenplay never becomes a parody of itself, but it also never apologies for how absurd it is. For confirmation, one needs only look at Nicolas Cage launching one of the bad guys (portrayed brilliantly by the late Tony Todd) out a window using a missile while calling him “the Rocket Man.”

Its ultra-quotable dialogue makes the film endlessly re-watchable, and when paired with practical effects that still hold up even in the modern CGI era, The Rock sets the standard for what makes an action movie truly work. Even supporting characters are given memorable roles, helping to prop up the heroes and flesh out their characters.

As we honor The Rock‘s 30th anniversary, it remains one of the textbook examples of how to make an entertaining action movie that also has weight. In an era where more and more action movies begin to feel formulaic, The Rock understands that spectacle isn’t enough. Great action needs interesting heroes, villains, and crafty dialogue to make sure that the movies are elevated above the norm.


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The Rock


Release Date

June 7, 1996

Runtime

137 minutes



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Conor Sheeran
Almontather Rassoul

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