Warning: This article contains spoilers fromLonglegs.
“My mom put on Noxzema cold cream.
The whiteness of the cold cream just really spooked me.”

Nicolas Cage in ‘Longlegs’.NEON
“He has a strange connection to the color white,” Cage notes of his character.
“I don’t really know what it is.
He says it’s just a force he’s aware of.

Nicolas Cage’s Longlegs killer.NEON
You don’t question it too much.
He knows it when he sees it.”
She would talk in terms that were kind of poetry.

Nicolas Cage’s Longlegs builds a new doll for one of his victims in ‘Longlegs’.NEON
I didn’t know how else to describe it.
I tried to put that in the Longlegs character because he’s really a tragic entity.
The film follows F.B.I.
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“I see Longlegs as neither male nor female,” Cage explains.
When the prophet was talking, she was saying, ‘Do you find me beautiful?’
to [Giulietta] Masina’s character and going through all those really bizarre vocal shrieks and whatnot.
Oz came to the table and said, ‘Why don’t you plump your hair in this shot?’
I thought, ‘That’s fantastic, man.
Let’s do that.’
And then I took it a little further and said, ‘Do you find me beautiful?’
He didn’t put that in the movie, but I wanted that.
I wanted Longlegs to be a character that wanted to be perceived as very beautiful."
“I kept going over it and over it.
He didn’t socialize, however, with his costar, Monroe.
He thinks it may have been intentional on Perkins' part.
That’s yet another connection to Cobble.
“He sees her as a hero of sorts.”