COLOR OUT OF SPACE (2019) - Lovecraftian Nic Cage is Best Nic Cage

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Published 2020-03-29

All Comments (21)
  • @BeatRiceIsHere
    Nic Cage feels like that one substitute teacher in middle school that would talk to the class about his divorce
  • @logic1y964
    Imagine being this guy's neighbor and seeing bright magenta blaring out this guy's window following up with a cardboard cutout of Nicolas Cage.
  • @TheLeugim66
    I have a theory that Nick Cage is actually a genius. Somewhere during his earlier career he realized that he could be a great actor, and people would maybe remember him for a while, or he could become “Nick Cage!” and people would remember him forever. Gotta say it’s an effective strategy.
  • I really agree with Lovecraft on the "not liking humanoid aliens" thing, since the odds are that aliens will end up looking little to nothing like humans.
  • Theres this thing about mister cage, its like his whole demeanor when he acts is just cursed
  • @notnowjohn765
    Little did we know that Nic Cage is actually one of Lovecraft's creations brought to life.
  • @GermanKinsmen
    I like the implication that the Color wasn't even necessarily a hostile force. It just wanted fuel to go home. Unfortunately, it's so alien to us that it pays no mind to the fact it's using living beings as fuel.
  • @Dovah21
    I really like the detail you added about magenta; it added some insight about their choice in using it. I always thought they chose it because that particular shade is kind of eerie and aggressive, but it makes way more sense and is more effective when you know that magenta "doesn't exist" and is consequently the only way the characters and the audience can perceive the "Color" in the movie.
  • @mqfii8992
    You know, I'm 129% convinced that Cage doesn't act. They just kidnap him while he sleeps, put him In a set with actors and let the camera roll as he wakes up. Now that I think about it... I WANNA SEE A TRUMAN SHOW STARRING CAGE!
  • @Sizzlor
    "Destroy the child. Corrupt them all," is the plot of this movie.
  • @wtfpolice
    During the scene at night with Ward at his tent reading a book, he hears a noise in the woods and goes to investigate. He shines his flashlight and catches a glimpse of the color, when suddenly his jeep starts by itself. The headlights of his jeep illuminate the book he was reading which is none other than "The Willows" by Algernon Blackwood, considered by H.P. Lovecraft to be the best supernatural tale in English literature.
  • @scarfguy5337
    Nathan shooting the monster that was his wife and son then exclaiming "they're not my family" feels like a moment of clarity in his corrupted mind to me. Like he snapped put of it just long enough to realize his family was suffering and he had to put them down.
  • I couldn’t stop laughing when nick was milking the alpacas and his son smirked and said “nice one dad”
  • @CheeseYourself
    "This movie is set back-in-the-day." *proceeds to show footage of Arthur Morgan falling off a horse*
  • @M4gnetar11
    Elvis: Magenta is a type of color that humans can only perceive on a specific frequency and does not technically exist on a light spectrum. Also Elvis: He’s a hydrologist, he does water stuff
  • Nick would be great as the dad in a live-action Coraline, he looks and acts just like him.
  • @RetroGeist86
    I love how excited Elvis gets when talking about a movie he genuinely enjoys rather than torturing himself with movies like Swamp Ape
  • @goji3755
    I'm loving the whole idea of making a trilogy out of these stories, and it sounds like Stanley picked the perfect way to do it. G-spot. Because its a pussycat.
  • @SkeIewizard
    “the color has taken over, 100%” corruption music starts playing