Nicolas Cage is opening up about a side of Hollywood that few actors discuss: the lingering tension that comes from saying no to powerful directors.
The 62-year-old actor recently said that Christopher Nolan and several other A-list filmmakers stopped working with him after he declined earlier offers to star in their movies.
Cage shared the story during a Q&A with the New York Times while promoting his new film “Madden,” directed by David O. Russell, in which he plays iconic football coach John Madden.
According to Cage, Russell was the only director who ever reached out to him again after being turned down in the past.
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“Most of them, they get their feelings hurt and don’t call you back,” he said.
“It’s happened a million times to me.”
Cage claimed that Nolan stopped returning his calls after he passed on a role in the 2002 film “Insomnia,” which ultimately starred Al Pacino and Robin Williams.
“Insomnia” was both a critical and commercial success, earning over $113 million at the global box office and helping cement Nolan’s reputation for tightly constructed psychological thrillers.
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The actor said the same thing happened with other acclaimed directors, including Paul Thomas Anderson and Woody Allen.
“They don’t call me back,” he said, adding that his collaboration with Anderson almost happened early in the filmmaker’s career.
“The Paul Thomas Anderson movie was a very early movie,” Cage explained.
“He’d shown me a short film with Philip Baker Hall, who was in ‘Hard Eight.’ And we were going to do something and it didn’t work out.”
For Cage, the experience with Russell stood out because it broke the pattern he had come to expect.
“David did call me, and it showed a lot of class that he would call me back and invite me again,” he said.
“I didn’t want to say no to him again because I have great respect for his talent.”
The actor did not specify which of Russell’s previous films he turned down, but described it as happening “a million years ago.”
He said it had been “a good movie” and that although he had declined the offer at the time, Russell was unique for giving him another chance.
Nicolas Cage says Christopher Nolan is among the directors who “get their feelings hurt” after actors turn down their movies.
Following the backlash surrounding The Odyssey (2026), Cage revealed he once turned down Nolan’s Insomnia (2002) and claims Nolan never contacted him… pic.twitter.com/LKIwbwfDT2— Movies Scenes (@SceneinCinema) May 26, 2026
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Cage’s remarks highlight an unusual professional dynamic, where Hollywood’s top directors often maintain long-term partnerships with actors who accept their early offers and rarely revisit those who do not.
Nolan, now 55, is known for repeatedly working with favorites like Cillian Murphy, Matt Damon, Anne Hathaway, and Tom Hardy.
The director has been in the spotlight recently as he prepares for the release of “The Odyssey,” his adaptation of the ancient Greek epic, scheduled for July 17.
In an interview with Time, Nolan defended his decision to cast musician Travis Scott as a bard, explaining, “I cast him because I wanted to nod towards the idea that this story has been handed down as oral poetry, which is analogous to rap.”
Cage’s comments seem less like criticism and more like a reflection on the unspoken etiquette of Hollywood relationships, where a single declined opportunity can quietly close a door for good.
For now, the actor is focused on his return to high-profile drama with “Madden,” and on his appreciation for the rare director willing to give him another call.
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