Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call New Orleans May 2026

Nicolas Cage plays Terence McDonagh, a police detective who starts the film by saving a prisoner from drowning during Hurricane Katrina. He injures his back in the process, leading to a crippling addiction to Vicodin, cocaine, and whatever else he can find in the evidence locker.

Forget the 1992 Harvey Keitel original. This isn't a remake; it’s a hallucinatory descent into a post-Katrina purgatory, led by a Nicolas Cage performance that redefined "over the top." The Plot (Or Lack Thereof) Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans

Only Werner Herzog would pause a high-stakes crime drama for a two-minute POV shot of an iguana sitting on a coffee table while "Release Me" plays in the background. His obsession with the "overwhelming lack of order" in nature makes the decaying New Orleans setting feel like a character itself. Nicolas Cage plays Terence McDonagh, a police detective

The film operates on "dream logic." Problems that should ruin McDonagh’s life—gambling debts, corrupt internal affairs investigations—somehow resolve themselves through sheer, chaotic luck. The Verdict This isn't a remake; it’s a hallucinatory descent

Should I focus on a different cult classic?