one flew over the cuckoo’s nest film directed by milos forman

12
One Flew Over the One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

Upload: pearl-jordan

Post on 17-Jan-2018

226 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The Director – Milos Forman Born in 1932, outside of Prague, Czechoslovakia Began making films in the 1960s; style based on realism and lack of traditional heroes Loves of a Blonde (1966) nominated for an Academy award for Best Foreign Language Film; Fireman’s Ball received same recognition in however, communist authorities labeled it a threat and banned the film. One year while Forman was visiting Paris, the Soviet Union invaded Czechoslovakia; he never returned to his homeland; the image of the Soviet Union tanks rolling into his country continued to haunt him and echoes throughout his work on …Cuckoo’s Nest American film debut, Taking Off (a comedy about the lack of understanding between young people and their parents)

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Nest

Film Directed by

Milos Forman

Page 2: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

Key FactsKey FactsType of Work: Feature FilmGenre: DramaWhere it was filmed:

Oregon State Mental Hospital in Salem, ORDate of Release: 1975Setting: Oregon State Mental Hospital,

1963

Page 3: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

The Director – Milos FormanThe Director – Milos Forman Born in 1932, outside of Prague, Czechoslovakia

Began making films in the 1960s; style based on realism and lack of traditional heroes

Loves of a Blonde (1966) nominated for an Academy award for Best Foreign Language Film; Fireman’s Ball received same recognition in 1967-- however, communist authorities labeled it a threat and banned the film.

One year while Forman was visiting Paris, the Soviet Union invaded Czechoslovakia; he never returned to his homeland; the image of the Soviet Union tanks rolling into his country continued to haunt him and echoes throughout his work on …Cuckoo’s Nest

1971- American film debut, Taking Off (a comedy about the lack of understanding between young people and their parents)

Page 4: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

Context of the Novel’s AdaptationContext of the Novel’s Adaptation Kesey’s 1962 novel initially adapted as a Broadway play in

1963 starring Kirk Douglas

K. Douglas bought the film rights and tried unsuccessfully for 12 years to generate interest from Hollywood; he later sold the rights to the film to his son, Michael Douglas

M. Douglas co-produced the United Artists film with Saul Zaentz

Producers chose Forman to direct the film because of his ability to capture concerns of the times

Forman’s Taking Off reflected the theme of the generation gap in the 1960s and 1970s; a time when, especially, young people began questioning all manners of authority, old-fashion institutions, and the social status quo

Page 5: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

Context (cont.)Context (cont.) Civil Rights movement and anti-Vietnam War protests of the

1960s; women’s liberation movement of the 1970s; followed by the a particularly transforming event of the times – National Guardsmen opened fire on student protesters at Kent State University in 1970, prompted by a rock throwing incident, and killed four students

A few years later, American faith in authority was further shaken by Watergate break-in and subsequent cover-up (led to President Nixon’s resignation in 1974)

Mid-70s baby-boomers’ counter-culture was ripe for a film dramatizing rebellion against oppressive bureaucracy and insistence upon rights, self-expression, and freedom

In 1975, the antiauthority stance of Forman’s film One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest resonated strongly with the events of the 1970s.

Page 6: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

CriticsCritics Perhaps the best-known antiauthority film in history; today

this film is considered to be one of the greatest American films Kesey’s film “came along when the right metaphor for the human

condition was a loony bin”– Kael for The New Yorker Top U.S. film critics gave the film positive reviews; any

reservations that critics had related to the film’s simplification of themes in Kesey’s novel

NOTE: Kesey was so upset by the filmmaker’s choice to change the perspective of the story-telling (away from Chief Bromden’s first-person perspective) that he sued the producers

◦ Kesey never saw the movie; as Faye Kesey explained: “There was a legal dispute over financial earnings from Cuckoo’s Nest, during which we met with this awful lawyer who was really horrid to be around. At one point, he became so irate with Ken and yelled at him saying, ‘when this movie comes out, you’ll be the first in line to see it.’ Ken glared back at him and swore he’d never see the film. And that was that.”

Page 7: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

Critics (cont.)Critics (cont.)“A film so good in so many of its parts that here’s a

temptation to forgive when it does go wrong. But it does go wrong, insisting on making larger points than its story should really carry, so that at the end, the human qualities of the characters get lost in the significance of it all. And yet there are those moments of brilliance.” –Roger Ebert (film critic, winner of a Pulitzer Prize)

Ranked #33 on American Film Institute’s list of AFI 100 Years…series

Nurse Ratched ranked #5 on the Institute’s list of 50 Greatest Villains

Page 8: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

AcknowledgementsAcknowledgementsThe 7th highest-grossing film ever (at its time)—

bringing in almost $300 million worldwide

Beat out Spielberg’s Jaws (1975) for Best Picture

Film deemed “culturally significant” by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States Film Registry in 1993

1975 Director’s Guild Award: Milos Forman

Film was shown in Swedish cinemas between 1975 and 1987—12 years! Which is still a record

Page 9: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

1975 Academy Awards1975 Academy AwardsBest Picture: Saul Zaentz and Michael DouglasBest Director: Milos FormanBest Actor: Jack NicholsonBest Actress: Louise FletcherBest Adapted Screenplay: Lawrence Hauben

and Bo GoldmanFirst film to win all five major Academy

Awards since It Happened One Night (1934) and not repeated until Silence of the Lambs (1991)

Page 10: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

CastingCasting Randle Patrick McMurphy –

JACK NICHOLSON Nurse Mildred Ratched –

LOUISE FLETCHER Dale Harding – WILLIAM

REDFIELD Dr. John Spivey – DEAN R.

BROOKS Orderly Turkle – SCATMAN

CROTHERS Martini – DANNY DE VITO Jim Sefelt – WILLIAM DUELL Billy Bibbit – BRAD DOURIF

Max Taber – CHRISTOPHER LLOYD

Chief Bromden – WILL SAMPSON

Fredrickson – VINCENT SCHIAVELLI

Charlie Cheswick – SYDNEY LASSICK

Ellis – MICHAEL BERRYMAN

Attendant Washington – NATHAN GEORGE

Attendant Warren – MWAKO CUMBUKA

Nurse Itsu – LAN FENDORS Nurse Pilbow – MIMI

SARKISIAN

Page 11: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

Casting (cont.)Casting (cont.)The role of Nurse Ratched was turned down by 5 actresses

including Anne Bancroft and Angela Lansbury; Fletcher accepted casting only a week before filming began

The role of McMurphy was originally offered to James Caan; Marlon Brando and Gene Hackman were considered as well.

Film debuts for Sampson (Chief), Dourif (Bibbit), and Christopher Lloyd (Taber)

One of 1st films for DeVito (Lloyd and DeVito co-starred several years later in the television series Taxi)

Page 12: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Film Directed by Milos Forman

Casting (cont.)Casting (cont.)Forman cast the institution’s administrator as the doctor

in the film

Forman used actual patients as extras

In the role as Chief Bromden, Forman cast Will Sampson, a non actor, a full-blooded member of the Creek tribe working as a park ranger near Salem, Oregon

Nicholson’s acting persona as the heroic rebel McMurphy had earlier been set with his performances in Easy Rider (1969) and Five Easy Pieces (1970)