Even a Sunburnt Nic Cage Can’t Keep The Surfer Afloat

The man known only to us as The Surfer (Nicolas Cage) heads to the beach with his teenage son (Finn Little). Though he sounds American, The Surfer was actually born in Australia, where he’s now living again. He’s trying to scare up the financing to buy his childhood beachfront home. He wants to take his son surfing to show him the best possible vantage point of the new house.
Unfortunately, however, the beach is already littered with very proprietorial surfers, who do not take kindly to strangers. “Don’t live here, don’t surf here,” is their refrain; when The Surfer tries to hit the waves, they resort to violence. He is humiliated – he does not have the closest relationship to his boy, and had planned this trip in large part to impress him – but that humiliation makes him determined. He will live there. He will surf there. Or he will die trying.
Lorcan Finnegan intended The Surfer to be a tribute to the 1968 Frank Perry classic, The Swimmer. In that earlier film, Burt Lancaster plays an advertising executive who decides to spend a lazy summer Sunday “swimming home” across his neighbor’s backyard pools. Lancaster starts the movie as a happy professional implied to have a loving family and plenty of good friends. Pool by pool however, the illusion slips, and his dream life is revealed to be empty at its center. He ends the movie weeping in a rainstorm by the front door of his locked, deserted house, with absolutely nothing to his name.
Similarly, The Surfer is about the lack of solidity beneath the stereotypical masculine dream of being a good provider, with a nice watch, a fancy car, and an adoring family. The Surfer pulls up to the beach in a Lexus. Soon after his ordeal begins, that car disappears and is replaced with a rundown red jalopy. The beach bums try to gaslight him that the Lexus never existed, and we are briefly left wondering whether they are right, but ultimately what matters is that something as tangible and solid can be taken away in an instant. Whether it was real or not, as Burt Lancaster discovered six decades earlier: material wealth is an illusion.
Knowing about that link with The Swimmer is really the key to the movie. If you hear the premise “Nicolas Cage goes up against some asshole beach bums in Australia,” you will have certain, violent expectations. Cage spends the vast majority of The Surfer suffering through a near-complete destruction of the mind, body and spirit. Eventually, he becomes a painfully sunburnt, dehydrated, jabbering wreck, scavenging from dustbins and, at one point, even considering biting into a dead rat. Watching it all unfold, anyone even slightly familiar with Cage’s oeuvre will be thinking that, surely after sinking to such depths of degradation, the comeback will be glorious.