One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975) USA
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Image Cover
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Director:Milos Forman
Studio:Warner Home Video
Producer:Martin Fink, Michael Douglas, Saul Zaentz
Writer:Ken Kesey, Bo Goldman
Rating:4.5
Rated:R
Date Added:2007-03-06
Purchased On:2007-06-03
ASIN:0790732181
UPC:0085393622220
Price:$14.98
Awards:Won 5 Oscars. Another 28 wins & 11 nominations
Genre:Drama
Release:1997-12-16
IMDb:0073486
Duration:133
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.85:1
Sound:Dolby
Languages:English, Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo, French, Dolby Digital 1.0, Spanish, Dolby Digital 1.0
Subtitles:English, Spanish, French
Features:Full Screen
Letterboxed
Milos Forman  ...  (Director)
Ken Kesey, Bo Goldman  ...  (Writer)
 
Jack Nicholson  ...  Randle Patrick McMurphy
Louise Fletcher  ...  Nurse Mildred Ratched
William Redfield  ...  Harding
Michael Berryman  ...  Ellis
Peter Brocco  ...  Colonel Matterson
Dean R. Brooks  ...  Dr. John Spivey
Alonzo Brown  ...  Miller
Scatman Crothers  ...  Orderly Turkle
Mwako Cumbuka  ...  Attendant Warren
Danny DeVito  ...  Martini
William Duell  ...  Jim Sefelt
Josip Elic  ...  Bancini
Lan Fendors  ...  Nurse Itsu
Nathan George  ...  Attendant Washington
Ken Kenny (II)  ...  
Mel Lambert  ...  Harbor Master
Sydney Lassick  ...  Charley Cheswick
Kay Lee  ...  
Christopher Lloyd  ...  
Dwight Marfield  ...  
Ken Kenny  ...  Beans Garfield
Comments: If he's crazy, what does that make you?

Summary: One of the key movies of the 1970s, when exciting, groundbreaking, personal films were still being made in Hollywood, Milos Forman's One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest emphasized the humanistic story at the heart of Ken Kesey's more hallucinogenic novel. Jack Nicholson was born to play the part of Randle Patrick McMurphy, the rebellious inmate of a psychiatric hospital who fights back against the authorities' cold attitudes of institutional superiority, as personified by Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher). It's the classic antiestablishment tale of one man asserting his individuality in the face of a repressive, conformist system--and it works on every level. Forman populates his film with memorably eccentric faces, and gets such freshly detailed and spontaneous work from his ensemble that the picture sometimes feels like a documentary. Unlike a lot of films pitched at the "youth culture" of the 1970s, One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest really hasn't dated a bit, because the qualities of human nature that Forman captures--playfulness, courage, inspiration, pride, stubbornness--are universal and timeless. The film swept the Academy Awards for 1976, winning in all the major categories (picture, director, actor, actress, screenplay) for the first time since Frank Capra's It Happened One Night in 1931. --Jim Emerson