Analysis Of The Film 'One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest'

1452 Words3 Pages

n Milos Forman’s movie One flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest demonstrates the inhumane mistreatment of patients within a psych ward. Nurse Ratched, a very controlling and power-hungry nurse has demoted all her patients to sheepish submissive beings. Randle McMurphy shows up and creates chaos in Nurse Ratched’s order. This causes Ratched to resort to the only solution she sees feasible, abuse and eventually lobotomization. As the film portrays, the mentally ill weren’t receiving proper treatment until mental illness was taken seriously by doctors and deinstitutionalization occurred. Unlike McMurphy’s treatment, deinstitutionalization in the 1960s impacted mental illness treatment positively and created a more societal acceptance of people with mental illness. In the film, Nurse Ratched is abusive and manipulative in her nursing practice. She is controlling and power-hungry: always needing things to run exactly as she plans. If any one misbehaves, she immediately medicates them or sends them to shock therapy. This alludes to how many 1960s wards treated their patients and tolerated no nonsense. Like many patients under this harsh treatment, Billy Bibbit commits suicide after the deep mental abuse of Nurse Ratched. As McMurphy initially ended up at the psych ward because he pleaded insane. He wanted out of the prison system and that was his key. As an audience, we immediately recognize that McMurphy isn’t crazy. According to Risdon Slate, many prisoners ended up in psych wards and vise versa (Slate). There is a societal misconception of associating mental illness with criminals causing a larger percentage of imprisonment of the mentally ill. Therefore, this proves there was a huge ambiguity around mental illness and mental health. Many people didn’t know how to differentiate or categorize the mentally ill including doctors. According to Sawyer’s case

Open Document