Essayer OR - Gratuit
Cuckoo's still crazy – and great - after all these years
The Independent
|October 13, 2025
'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' is 50 years old and Milos Forman's barbed mental hospital tale remains an underdog story for the ages in more ways than one
Age has not withered One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975), Milos Forman’s barnstorming account of the men who were once labelled lunatics inside what was once called an asylum. Shifting social attitudes can’t blunt its barbed comedy or draw the sting of a drama that pits timid patients against the icy, rigid Nurse Ratched. Time, if anything, has only sharpened the film's edges, so that it feels more lawless and hazardous than it did in the past. Lovingly dusted down and reissued for posterity, it swaggers into cinemas this week like Randle Patrick McMurphy into the Oregon state mental hospital.
Forman’s film is now 50, a solid, respectable age, except that Cuckoo's Nest has never really been respectable, let alone staid and settled, and more resembles a disreputable uncle who struck gold and joined the country club. It was an orphan, an outlier, rejected by every major studio until United Artists picked it up; the unruly underdog that went on to clean up at the Oscars and become the second-highest-grossing picture of the year behind Jaws (1975).
Most movie classics are the industry’s equivalent of elder statesmen or museum exhibits, coddled by history or pinned under glass. Cuckoo's Nest, though, continues to twist and turn in our grasp. It’s a film of its era – a dinosaur even – and yet it doesn’t feel dated and speaks across party lines. Cuckoo’s Nest loves freedom, self-sufficiency and the pursuit of personal happiness, and is therefore beloved by both old-school hippies and hard-right Maga types. Each side can claim that the film shares their values. Each sees itself in McMurphy while regarding the other side as Nurse Ratched.
The production was a scramble; it ran on adrenaline and confusion.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition October 13, 2025 de The Independent.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Independent
The Independent
When Saturday runs: risk and reward at the double
A ‘one-off’ London Marathon over both weekend days would bring societal and economic benefits, but would spreading the event also ‘dilute the magic’, asks Jamie Braidwood
5 mins
April 26, 2026
The Independent
Green balloon will soon lose air, just as Reform UK’s has
Nigel Farage’s enemies have watched the opinion polls over the past six months with some satisfaction, as air has escaped from the Reform balloon.
3 mins
April 26, 2026
The Independent
Box clever: a dozen shows you absolutely must watch
Is it just us, or is telly especially great right now? Here’s our pick of the best shows you’d kick yourself for missing out on
6 mins
April 26, 2026
The Independent
CHEAP CHILLS
You could spend thousands detoxing in a European clinic, or you could head to Sri Lanka for a gentle, authentic and surprisingly affordable wellness break, says Fiona McIntosh
4 mins
April 26, 2026
The Independent
If my passport has over 10 years on it, can I still travel?
Q I saw a post from Money Saving Expert suggesting that if your passport is valid for more than 10 years, you will be denied travel. Can you clarify this, please?
1 mins
April 26, 2026
The Independent
Eze pearler allows nervous Arsenal to reclaim top spot
For so long, the trip to Manchester City was weighing on Arsenal’s mind.
4 mins
April 26, 2026
The Independent
Trump cancels envoys’ trip to Islamabad for Iran talks
President Donald Trump cancelled a trip by two US envoys to Iran war mediator Pakistan yesterday, dealing a new setback to peace prospects after Iran’s foreign minister departed Islamabad after speaking only to Pakistani officials.
2 mins
April 26, 2026
The Independent
Mayors warn unpopular PM may fuel elections drubbing
The widespread unpopularity of Sir Keir Starmer and his government - largely fuelled by “psychodrama” in Westminster - is hitting Labour hard on the doorstep, three regional mayors have warned as they brace for major losses in next month’s local elections.
4 mins
April 26, 2026
The Independent
Jones leads rampant Roses to 10-try victory over Wales
An injury to flanker Sadia Kabeya further depleted England stocks, even in a typically sizeable 62-24 Women’s Six Nations victory at Ashton Gate, writes Harry Latham-Coyle
3 mins
April 26, 2026
The Independent
Weston hits out at Trump’s ‘cruel joke’ over Falklands
Falklands veteran Simon Weston has hit out at reports the US could review its position on the South Atlantic territory in retaliation for Sir Keir Starmer’s lack of support for the war in Iran, branding it a “cruel joke”.
3 mins
April 26, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

