One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
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Has anyone read the book and watched the movie?
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Jennifer
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Jun 02, 2014 07:11AM

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It's an excellent movie and an equally excellent book but our club almost unanimously agreed that they are very different stories and you can enjoy both by seeing them as such.



However, the movie is incredibly well-acted and the story of how it came into being (for instance, it's filmed in a real mental hospital, with mental patients as extras) is worth the price of the special edition DVD.
The only drawback is that after watching the movie you cannot 'unsee' Jack Nicholson as Randall McMurphy or Brad Dourif as Billy Bibbitt.
As both are excellent, but different because of the limitations of the different expressions, I'm glad I don't have to choose between the book or the film.


I liked the movie, but you know how movies are...they leave things out or merge one character into another.
But all in all both book and movie are excellent.

Years ago in college I had to read the book and then saw the movie. Enjoyed both.

Try seeing the movie. I can see how a stage version could be depressing because of some of the limitations with sets and lighting. Also, Jack Nicholson was great and Nurse Ratchett was just so mean and easy to hate! I loved the book and the movie.
The movie was actually very true to the book, and the soundtrack is a work of art. All the actors are perfect for their parts--Jack Nicholson's McMurphy, oh my God, I cannot even describe how fantastic he was. . . and Louise Fletcher as Nurse Ratched was so, so amazing . . . so yeah, even coming from me (I'm one of those people who hates any movie based on her favorite book), the movie was great. Not as good as the book, obviously, but still really good!

While I will agree that I absolutely could not unsee Dourif or DeVito, I pictured Mac as William Sadler. Look and let me know what you think.
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0006669/

I've seen a few movies with Sadler, he's a great actor. Still, McMurphy was one of those defining roles for Nicholson and he is a great maniac. I think the casting director did an excellent job on the Forman film, and not just in the main roles. Dourif as Bibbitt was a revelation (I think it was his first movie?), but there were many actors cast in unexpected roles.
I saw an interview with Louise Fletcher recently, and she was so convincing as Nurse Ratched that she even had some backlash in public life where some people thought Fletcher, who is a sweet and gentle lady, was actually playing herself when she was playing Ratched. I think Nurse Ratched is actually in the Top Ten of all-time greatest movie villains.
I think that happens to other actors as well. Gary Oldman was described by an actress who worked with him as this really sweet sensitive guy that you just want to hug and protect against the hostile world, which sounds incongruous with his many antagonistic movie roles.


The major difference is that the book is narrated by Chief Bromden, from his point of view, wheres the film is from McMurphy's point of view.
Also, The Combine is never mentioned in the film, but was a major point in the book.

You should see him as Dimmesdale in The Scarlet Letter. He was so sweet, charming and simply wonderful that it was hard to believe the same actor had played so many hardasses.


I think the people who made the film felt the same way. It feels preachy.


The movie is not from McMurphy's viewpoint, but rather, like with most movies, looking objectively at what happens. There are a few scenes without McMurphy present (which wouldn't have been there if the movie was from his viewpoint).
Chief Broom was an excellent unreliable narrator in the book. The Combine and fog scenes serve to point out just how delusional he really is, and his assessment of what happens between Nurse Ratched and McMurphy is much more subjective. In that sense the movie doesn't require as much thinking and our bias (pro-Mac, anti-Ratched) isn't left to our own opinion or moral stances.




I think that would've required the mad genius of Terry Gilliam or Guillermo del Toro.



I also missed the Combine and fog references, but can see how they didn't fit in the confines of the movie.
If it were remade, I could see Kenneth Branagh playing McMurphy.



I think the book is better because I see a lot more insight going on, plus I prefer getting the story from Bromden's point of view. However, I would recommend watching the movie if you've read the book because it's actually a really good movie that follows the plot well, even if the point of view is switched up.

While the movie was a supreme adaptation it may have lost that power. I did enjoy the movie when I first saw it but for some reason I didn't get the idea that there was a theme of people being human afraid to go out there as it focused more on Jack Nicholson's "wacky" personality and we get little insight on what Bromden was going through though the little bit that he said was some definite gold.


I like this assessment. Hadn't thought of it this way.
The film is like a diagonal slice into the book, a collaborative interpretation heavily influenced by what can be conveyed within a limited medium. This theatrical/film angle had several years to be developed and honed to perfection.
How the film came to be made is a story in itself. Kirk Douglas owned the theatrical rights for a long time so he could play the McMurphy role. It was a Broadway hit. When he got too old to play McMurphy, his son Mike got the film rights from him and paired up with Saul Zaents to produce it and director Milos Forman (High Noon) to get it made. This pedigree, along with the stellar acting cast, yielded a well-deserved five Oscars in top categories.
It is an American classic for good reason, not the least of which is the omnipresence of a strong Native American character.

A quote I posted in the section on this here in Goodreads:
McMurphy: "The way I remember it the tribe got paid some huge amount."
"That's what they said to him (Bromden's father). He said, What can you pay for the way a man lives? He said, What can you pay for the way a man is? They didn't understand."

Folks today may not be aware that author Ken Kesey was a major figure of the late 60s counter-culture. His adventures in misadventure are recorded in Tom Wolfe's, The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.


I thought the movie was awesome. They are of course different for example in the book we learn that Chief Brooms affliction is that although he is a massive man, he believes himself to be tiny. He remains quiet so as not to attract attention and get crushed. The movie was terrific though and if I remember correctly swept the four main Oscar categories that year. Interestingly it was produced by Kirk and Michael Douglas, who accepted the Best Picture award.

I thought the movie was awesome. They are of course different for example in the book we learn that Chief Brooms affliction is that althoug..."
Per iMDb: 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' became the first film in 41 years to sweep the major categories...'
Academy Awards, USA 1976
Best Picture
Saul Zaentz Producer
Michael Douglas Producer
Best Actor in a Leading Role
Jack Nicholson
Best Actress in a Leading Role
Louise Fletcher
Best Director
Milos Forman
Best Writing, Screenplay Adapted From Other Material
Lawrence Hauben
Bo Goldman
(The adaptation was from both Ken Keseys' novel AND the Dale Wasserman stage version)
I remember standing in line to get in theater and being awed by the shocked looks on the faces of people exiting.

I hope no one ever lets it come across their mind to remake this film, as crazy-remaking Hollywood has been over the past 15 or so years!

Thinking about it, given the technological advances, that could wind up being a very good film!

Thinking about it, given the technological advances, that could wind up being a very good film! "
Very interesting. It could be incredibly thought-provoking if done well.

That would be a nice direction to go with a remake, although the movie that already exists it fine as is. A more "accurate-to-the-book" approach would certainly be welcome, assuming that it's done well with a good cast!

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