“Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans” (2009) is a psychological crime drama directed by Werner Herzog, starring Nicolas Cage in one of his most intense and transformative roles. Although it shares a title with the 1992 film Bad Lieutenant, Herzog’s version is not a remake or sequel but rather a reimagining that focuses on similar themes of moral decay, addiction, and the blurred lines between good and evil.
The story follows Terence McDonagh (Cage), a New Orleans police lieutenant who severely injures his back while rescuing a prisoner during Hurricane Katrina. The injury leads to a dependence on painkillers, which spirals into a dangerous addiction to various drugs, including cocaine and heroin. As his addiction deepens, McDonagh becomes increasingly unhinged, using his badge as a shield to justify violent and unethical behavior.
Assigned to investigate the brutal murder of a Senegalese immigrant family, McDonagh plunges deeper into corruption while maintaining a façade of duty. He manipulates suspects, steals drugs from evidence lockers, gambles recklessly, and maintains a complicated relationship with his drug-addicted girlfriend Frankie (Eva Mendes), who is also a high-end prostitute. As the investigation unfolds, so does McDonagh’s descent into moral chaos.
Despite his erratic and often immoral behavior, the character of McDonagh is portrayed with a strange kind of empathy. Herzog presents him not simply as a “bad cop” but as a man trapped in his own psychological and physical pain, searching for moments of redemption amidst his self-destruction.
Visually surreal and thematically dark, the film blurs the line between hallucination and reality, reflecting the protagonist’s deteriorating mental state. Nicolas Cage delivers a fearless performance, shifting between manic energy and eerie calm, capturing the full complexity of a man at war with himself.
Critically acclaimed for its bold direction and Cage’s standout performance, Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans is a haunting, offbeat film that challenges traditional crime drama tropes and leaves a lasting impression on viewers drawn to stories of inner collapse and twisted justice.