Well, for a trivially small array, $array === (array) $array is significantly faster than is_array($array). On the order of over 7 times faster. But each call is only on the order of 1.0 x 10 ^ -6 seconds (0.000001 seconds). So unless you're calling it literally thousands of times, it's not going to be worth it. And if you are calling it thousands of times, I'd suggest you're doing something wrong...
The difference comes when you're dealing with a large array. Since $array === (array) $array requires a new variable to be copied requires the array to be iterated over internally for the comparison, it'll likely be SIGNIFICANTLY slower for a large array. For example, on an array with 100 integer elements, is_array($array) is within a margin of error (< 2%) of is_array() with a small array (coming in at 0.0909 seconds for 10,000 iterations). But $array = (array) $array is extremely slow. For only 100 elements, it's already over twice as slow as is_array() (coming in at 0.203 seconds). For 1000 elements, in_array stayed the same, yet the cast comparison increased to 2.0699 seconds...
The reason it's faster for small arrays is that is_array() has the overhead of being a function call, where the cast operation is a simple language construct... And iterating over a small variable (in C code) will typically be cheaper than the function call overhead. But, for larger variables, the difference grows...
It's a tradeoff. If the array is small enough, iteration will be more efficient. But as the size of the array grows, it will becomes increasingly slower (and hence the function call will become faster).
I'd suggest going for readability though. I find is_array($array) to be far more readable than $array === (array) $array. So you get the best of both worlds.
The script I used for the benchmark:
$elements = 1000;
$iterations = 10000;
$array = array();
for ($i = 0; $i < $elements; $i++) $array[] = $i;
$s = microtime(true);
for ($i = 0; $i < $iterations; $i++) is_array($array);
$e = microtime(true);
echo "in_array completed in " . ($e - $s) ." Seconds\n";
$s = microtime(true);
for ($i = 0; $i < $iterations; $i++) $array === (array) $array;
$e = microtime(true);
echo "Cast completed in " . ($e - $s) ." Seconds\n";
Edit: For the record, these results were with 5.3.2 on Linux...
Edit2: Fixed the reason the array is slower (it's due to the iterated comparison instead of memory reasons). See compare_function for the iteration code...