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Monday, August 25, 2014

"One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" (1975)

Jack Nicholson, Danny DeVito, Christopher Lloyd

Directed by Milos Foreman

 

 

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Most of the film was shot on location in an Oregon mental hospital.

While watching Milos Foreman's “One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest”, it occurred to me that I've been on a real psych movie kick lately. Shutter Island, Good Will Hunting, Cuckoo's Nest...I even caught myself looking at YouTube videos of Titicut Follies the other day. Psychiatry is often portrayed in a negative light in the media-- as a field of medicine where pedophiles and monsters pump their patients full of pills and electroshock while caging them like animals.

 

While the field has come a long way in the last hundred years, the early 20th century was marred with highly dangerous and pseudoscientific procedures and patterns of inhumane treatment toward patients. “One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest” is, among other things, a commentary on the barbarism of mid-century psychiatry and the misguided mindset of the management and society at large regarding mental health treatment.

 

An adaptation of the classic anti-establishment novel by Ken Kesey, “One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest” follows the free-spirited criminal Randall McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) as he is being admitted to an Oregan mental hospital. Randall aims to be declared insane so that he may ride out his short prison term in what he feels will be a comparatively comfortable setting.

 

McMurphy is put in a ward with quite an eclectic cast of characters including the 6'5” Native American “Chief” Bromden (Will Sampson), stuttering suicidal Billy Bibbit (Brad Douriff, who would later go on to play Wormtongue in the Lord of the Rings movies), the diminutive Mr. Martini (Danny DeVito, a face I didnt notice until well over halfway through the movie!) and the spastic “Taber” (Christopher Lloyd).

 

Shortly after his admission to the hospital, McMurphy begins to notice that many of the patients are being abused and degraded, kept in submission by the tyrannical and calculating Head Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher). McMurphy bands together with the other patients in his ward to mount a rebellion against the oppressive Ratched, causing more than a few riotous moments.

 

This film is intellectual gold. Aside from being immensely culturally relevant (a strong theme of individuality v. authority/establishment is felt throughout) the film is a scathing commentary on the state of mental health treatment in the 1960's (Ken Kesey based the story on his experience working in a VA Hospital in Palo Alto, California).

The dialogue is smart, the direction is spot on (a number of the extras were actual mental patients, and the actors supposedly stayed in character between takes). The film lacks any true emotional content, save for the final scene, but overall I found it to be thoroughly satisfying.

 

The means and methods of psychiatric treatment in those days were inelegant and at times did more harm than good, while patients were stripped of their individuality and reduced to helpless subhuman husks of men in hospital Johnny coats. Healthcare professionals (embodied in Nurse Ratched's character) went about their heavy handed treatments with the quiet self assurance that their efforts were for a noble and justified objective, even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

 

 

 

 

A real rogue's gallery of characters give this movie so much flavor its crazy.

Casting was ready to give up on finding a gigantic Native Amerivan man to portray "Chief" Bromden, until they discovered local park ranger Will Sampson

Nicholson's manic energy lends itself to the character of R.P. McMurphy.

I give Cuckoo's Nest : 4 / 5 mental defectives

"Good Will Hunting"

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