City Of Angels | VERIFIED |

The plot is emotionally ambitious but structurally uneven. The pacing drags in the middle, and the philosophical “rules” of angelhood are fuzzy at best. Supporting characters (like Dennis Franz’s cynical former angel) feel underused, though Franz delivers a raw, affecting monologue about losing the ability to taste an apple.

“What good is an angel if he can’t feel the wind in his wings?” City of Angels

Cage plays Seth, a soft-spoken angel who spends his invisible days in Los Angeles libraries and operating rooms, observing humans with quiet reverence. His wide-eyed curiosity feels genuine — there’s a tender awkwardness when he tries on human gestures like borrowed clothes. Meg Ryan, as heart surgeon Maggie Rice, brings warmth and fierce vulnerability. Their chemistry is palpable, especially in a quiet scene where Seth sits in her empty apartment, touching the hollow of the pillow where her head once lay. The plot is emotionally ambitious but structurally uneven

Nicolas Cage and Meg Ryan star in Brad Silberling’s , a romantic fantasy that dares to ask: Would you give up eternity for one mortal moment of love? Loosely based on Wim Wenders’ art-house classic Wings of Desire , this Hollywood reimagining trades philosophical meditation for glossy, tear-jerking romance — and somehow, despite its flaws, it lands with haunting emotional force. “What good is an angel if he can’t