Here’s the breakdown, courtesy of GQ: Apparently, Seth Rogen and his longtime creative collaborator and “Green Hornet” screenwriter Evan Goldberg “spoke to Nicolas Cage about him possibly playing the Russian crime boss villain in ‘The Green Hornet,’ only for Cage to inform them he wanted to play him as a bald man, with hair tattooed on, large prosthetic lips and a voice like Edward G Robinson. They later met Cage in person and he informed them that, actually, he wanted to play him as a ‘white Bahamian,’ with a thick Caribbean accent, and proceeded to act out a scene in which he would be dumping pigs’ blood on Rogen’s ‘Green Hornet’ in a ‘creepy voodoo ritual.’”

The story continues, “He didn’t get the part but did request a meeting more recently during which Cage asked Rogen if he’d told James Franco about his idea, as he suspected Franco had nicked the character for ‘Spring Breakers.’” Whether or not that’s true, Franco’s character, named Alien, in “Spring Breakers” very much fits that description of a “white Bahamian” as pitched by Nicolas Cage. Rogen carried on, “The second part actually just happened before the pandemic. I mean, he already doesn’t like me, is the point. So he’ll continue not to like me!” The villain role in Michel Gondry’s 2011 “The Green Hornet” ended up going to Christoph Waltz, who took the character in a decidedly different direction. The movie ended up being a box office bomb but has acquired cult status in some circles. Head over to GQ to read the full interview with Seth Rogen. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.