How to sound like: Nicolas Cage as Spider-Man Noir in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

Here's my next installment of character voice tips. Today we'll do Nicolas Cage as Spider-Man Noir in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.

1) Use a low and growly voice with a New York accent and a medium tempo that stereotypes him and represents he is from the 1930s.

2) Use a mysterious and deadpan tone.

3) Use a grizzled, hard-boiled and dark performance.

4) Use an intense and dramatic approach.

5) Use a gruff and gravelly timbre.

6) Use a bass register and a bass voice type.

7) Use a slow deliberate cadence.

8) Use a low vocal range, a low octave, a low pitch and a low tessitura.

9) Use a dramatic basso profondo voice subtype.

10) Use a heavy vocal weight.

11) Use loud volume.

12) Use a normal voice pace.

13) Use a clear crisp articulation.

14) Prepare the role like Humphrey Bogart as Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon.

15) Imagine yourself as a private eye living in the 1930s investigating or a movie director that is larger-than-life charismatic, confident, and Errol Flynn-style handsome, a human magnet and a classically flawed optimist: sweet and well-intentioned, yet doomed by his demons within.

16) Play the character with the perspective and characterization of him as a guy that is brooding and melancholy towards his hero work, severed ties with his friends, family and girlfriend and went through a mysterious pipe to a world filled with mushrooms.

17) Improvise dialogue or anything.

18) Channel Orson Welles.

19) Try an exaggerated impression of him. Even if your impression isn’t very good, the attempt has probably pushed your voice in several interesting ways, giving you a really distinctive voice.

20) Lastly, use a serious and old-fashioned delivery.

Anyway I hope you enjoyed that and next week I’ll have another character for you. As always thanks for reading.

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