What Is The Moral Of One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest

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Movies of the 70’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, (Milos Forman) A madhouse is still better than the jail, thinks at least of the burnt-down dolly Patrick McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) when he pleads in court for insanity and gets himself into a mental hospital. But far from it, a malicious station nurse is leading a brutal and inhumane regime. The helpless patients vegetate in fear and despair, if any of them should have difficulty adapting, he is mercilessly put to rest with painful electric shocks. In order to convince the prison leadership under Dr. Spivey (Dean R. Brooks) of his preemptive mental illness, McMurphy instigates restlessness wherever he can and soon finds friends among the patients. His bizarre actions turn out to be the best remedy for the sick, and slowly they awaken from their joyless lethargy. Jack Nicholson plays the most charismatic leader to be followed everywhere and into any stupidity. A gambler, crook with the heart in the right spot. A chaotic good rebel who gives less to social rules and norms and proves that normality in this version can only be cruel …show more content…

As a traumatized former navy he can not sleep at night and starts working as a taxi driver, whom the shadows of the metropolis meet each evening on the street. Martin Scorsese's directed one of the greatest and most debated works of American film history and as a central film in New Hollywood. The character development is great, the camera work is great and shows the contrast between the normal world (light color adjustment) and Travis world (dark tones). You can always discover new details. It is everything but a simple action thriller, taxi driver showed me the atomization of the city, the complete isolation of the individual in the city and the possible consequences of this development for the

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