opens by showing us Randle Patrick McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) being Brough to an unnamed psychiatric hospital: having wangled a transfer to the hospital …
In order to avoid the hard labour at the prison he was serving his rape sentence at.
In the hospital?
In the hospital, he mets his fellow patients: who include … Chief Bromden (Will Sampson), a Native American who’s (seemingly) mute.
Billy Bibbit (a very young Brad Dourif): a young man who’s stutters.
Max Taber (Christopher Lloyd): one of the few patients sentenced to seat at the hospital.
The ward McMurphy is on … ?
Is run by Nurse Ratchet (Louise Fletcher) … a woman who is controlling, and domineering … and who sees the ward as very much her domain.
And someone who the patients are deeply intimidated by …
The rebellious McMurphy, and the overbearing Ratched … get on like a house on fire.
With the feud seriously starting? When McMurphy arranges a little fishing trip … …
~≈§≈~
Now …
“Paul, what did you think,” I hear you cry … ?
At least … I hear you metaphorically cry!
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest … is fantastic.
Nicholson is at his wolfish best, in a film whose production rights — initially — had been owned by Kirk Douglas: who’d had a hit with the Broadway stage version back in the 1960s.
But who, by the time a studio got involved? Was felt too old to play the lead role.
That is … providential, I think.
Nicholson as the anarchic McMurphy, is perfect casting, as is Louise Fletcher as Nurse Ratchet: the two are as matched as black and white, law and chaos, good and evil …
And whose antagonistic relationship drives the whole film in a way that I don’t think I’ve seen anywhere else.
That … ?
Is possibly only part of what earned One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest the big five Oscars.
~≈§≈~
The rest of those Oscars … ?
I have said this before, and will possibly say this again: I am someone who likes a good film, but couldn’t necessarily explain the hows, why's and wherefores of what make a good film, a good film.
All I can say?
Is that One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest tells us the very human story of a man who’s life has set him to be some trying deeply to be someone who want’s to fight the good fight, and do various amounts of good …
AND having to deal with an establishment he really doesn’t like.
Frankly?
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest is possibly one of THE movies.
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Just as a final thought?
ReplyDeleteI only mention some of the cast in ne Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.
And the one’s I do?
Are superb: Dourif as the sympathetic Billy, Fletcher as Nurse Ratchet, Nicholson, himself, in the lead role …
What struck me?
Was Danny DeVito: as Martini.
It’s never actually stated: but I got the feeling his character had what they now call Special needs.
To someone like me, used to see him as one of a hundred variations of Loiue, his character in Taxi?
It}s amazing to watch!