Try GOLD - Free
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.
This story is from the October 13, 2025 edition of The Independent.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Independent
The Independent
Stripping her violin of every note from its polished throat
Frieda Hughes on a final encore for a friend much missed
1 min
April 25, 2026
The Independent
Oh no... they’re getting the Ed Mili-band back together
The logic sounds plausible.
4 mins
April 25, 2026
The Independent
Public electric car charging now cheaper than petrol
The cost of charging an electric vehicle (EV) at a public charger is now lower on average than petrol or diesel for the first time in over a year, according to new figures.
2 mins
April 25, 2026
The Independent
Starmer facing Commons vote on Mandelson inquiry
Sir Keir Starmer is expected to face a Commons vote as early as next week that could spark an inquiry into his handling of the Peter Mandelson vetting saga, The Independent has been told.
3 mins
April 25, 2026
The Independent
Are we prepared? Market falls likely, says BoE expert
The Bank of England’s (BoE) deputy governor has warned of a fall in global stock markets, saying near-record valuations are unsustainable.
4 mins
April 25, 2026
The Independent
Royals in the USA... what’s the worst that could happen?
The dominant backdrop to next week’s global news cycle will be a succession of sometimes joyous, sometimes solemn state occasions, where the union flag and the stars and stripes fly side by side.
4 mins
April 25, 2026
The Independent
Saints’ brave plan to end Man City’s hopes of treble
Guardiola’s team meet England’s form side in FA Cup semi
4 mins
April 25, 2026
The Independent
Who could replace Starmer if Labour wield the axe?
How long has Keir Starmer got?
4 mins
April 25, 2026
The Independent
NOWHERE MEN
The Beatles’ ill-fated manager, Brian Epstein, is the focus of ‘Please Please Me’, an insightful new production that suffers from not having the Fab Four’s music, writes Alice Saville
2 mins
April 25, 2026
The Independent
‘Coming to songwriting in my fifties was terrifying’
Rita Wilson has been fiercely protective of her personal life for years, but now she’s opening up in her music and, she tells Roisin O’Connor, allowing herself to ‘have the dream’
6 mins
April 25, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

