| | | Winner of 5 Academy Awards including Best Picture!|Winner of 5 Academy Awards, Including Best Picture. Features: DVD, Dolby Digital (5.1) When free-spirited petty crook Randy P. McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) arrives at the state mental hospital, his contagious sense of disorder jolts the routine. He's on one side of a brewing war, soft-spoken, coolly monstrous Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher) on the other. At stake is the fate of every patient on the ward.Seen here in a revitalized digital transfer from refurbished elements, this electrifying adaptation of Ken Kesey's acclaimed bestseller swept all five major 1975 Academy Awards: Best Picture (produced by Saul Zaentz and Michael Douglas), Actor (Nicholson), Actress (Fletcher), Director (Milos Forman), and Adapted Screenplay (Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman). Raucous, searing and with superb cast that includes Brad Dourif, Danny DeVito, and Christopher Lloyd in his film debut, it soars. "...a triumph of the human spirit..." Leonard Maltin's Movie & Video Guide "A powerful, smashingly effective movie." Pauline Kael, The New York Times "...touching, hilarious, dramatic and completely effective..." VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever "A masterpiece." Mike Clark, USA Today "A deeply disturbing film...[that is] compelling to the point of obsession...[a] jarring and electrifying drama..." The Motion Picture Guide
 Editor's Note
 Milos Foreman's ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST, based on the novel by Ken Kesey and the play by Dale Wasserman, presents a biting and ultimately tragic satire about mental institutions and the human spirit. A disturbing, witty, and electrifying drama, the film won the 1975 Academy Award for Best Picture. R.P. McMurphy (Jack Nicholson), a misbehaved con who shirks authority, finds himself in an asylum after faking insanity to get out of work detail in prison. The vivacious troublemaker soon finds himself in a worse kind of prison--one presided over by the repressed, terrifyingly quiet Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher), whose set of rules and regulations are meant to suppress patients' psychotic outbursts, and their spirits. It's not long before McMurphy is reaching out to his new inmates, trying desperately to bring life to an otherwise dead atmosphere. To Ratched, however, Nicholson's free spirit is as dangerous as a schizophrenic impulse. ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST is brilliantly acted by an ensemble that includes Brad Dourif, Christopher Lloyd, Vincent Schiavelli, and Danny DeVito.
| Features | 2-Disc Set |  | 8 Additional Scenes |  | Audio Commentary |  | Audio: English, French Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound |  | Cast And Director Highlights |  | Making Of Documentary |  | Scene Selection |  | Subtitles: English, French, Spanish |  | Theatrical Trailers |  | Subtitles: English, Spanish, French |  | Scene Access |  | Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC], French Dolby Digital Mono |  | Interactive Menus |  | Cast/Director Career Highlights |  | Behind-the-Scenes Documentary "The Making Of One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" |  | Feature Length Audio Commentary by Director Milos Forman, Producers Michael Douglas and Saul Zaentz |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Warner |
 | Release Date: 2/1/2005 |
 | Running Time: 133 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 1975 |  | Catalog ID: 37463 |  | UPC: 00085393746322 |  | Number of Discs: 2 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English, French Dubbed |  | Available Subtitles: Bashkir, English, French, Japanese, Spanish, Thai, Chinese |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Anamorphic Widescreen 1.85:1 |
| Cast & Crew
| Awards | Oscar (1976) |  | Jack Nicholson, Winner, Best Actor |  | Louise Fletcher, Winner, Best Actress |  | Milos Forman, Winner, Best Director |  | Michael Douglas, Saul Zaentz, Winner, Best Picture |  | Lawrence Hauben, Bo Goldman, Winner, Best Writing, Screenplay | | Golden Globe (1976) |  | Brad Dourif, Winner, Best Acting Debut in a Motion Picture - Male |  | Jack Nicholson, Winner, Best Motion Picture Actor - Drama | | Oscar (1976) |  | Jack Nicholson, Winner, Best Actor in a Leading Role |  | Lawrence Hauben, Bo Goldman, Winner, Best Writing, Screenplay Adapted From Other Material | | Golden Globe (1976) |  | Lawrence Hauben, Bo Goldman, Winner, Best Screenplay - Motion Picture |  | Louise Fletcher, Winner, Best Motion Picture Actress - Drama | | Oscar (1976) |  | Louise Fletcher, Winner, Best Actress in a Leading Role | | Golden Globe (1976) |  | Milos Forman, Winner, Best Director - Motion Picture |  | One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Winner, Best Motion Picture - Drama |
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| | Professional Reviews | USA Today "...[A] masterpiece..." 01/09/1998 p.3DChicago Bulletin "...Nicholson's performance is one of the high points in a long career of enviable rebels..." 02/02/2003 p.5 Sight and Sound "...[Nicholson's] flamboyant performance is balanced perfectly by superb character turns from Brad Dourif, Christopher Lloyd and Danny DeVito..." 12/01/2002 p.64 Premiere "Nicholson's manic and slightly corrosive charm motors this study of one roistering inmate's effect on an entire mental institution." 04/01/2004 p.70 Total Film "Milos Forman's masterpiece." 03/01/2004 p.5 The Motion Picture Guide 9 of 10 A deeply disturbing film...nevertheless compelling to the point of obsession... Beyond jarring and e ReelViews 9 of 10 Arguably, some of the issues addressed by One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest are not as relevant in 2006 as they were in the mid-1970s, but that realization in no way diminishes the film's dramatic impact. This was the second English language film for Czech-born filmmaker Milos Forman, who would go on to win two Oscars (one for this movie and one for Amadeus), and was the picture that catapulted him onto the A-list for directors. The negative aspects of mental health care impugned by One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest are largely no longer in place today (electroconvulsive therapy is rarely used, frontal lobotomies are not performed), but the film's other themes are germane. On the surface, the movie is about the struggle of wills between patient R.P. McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) and Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher). Beneath the surface, it's about the attempts of an autocratic force to squash the individual...As portrayed by Jack Nicholson, McMurphy is one of cinema's iconic characters, so it may come as a surprise to learn that Nicholson was not the filmmakers' first choice. He was number three on the list, and was only offered the part after it was turned down by Gene Hackman and Marlon Brando. In 1975, Nicholson's star was on the rise. - James Berardinelli Chicago Sun-Times 10 of 10 "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" (1975) is on every list of favorite films. It was the first film since "It Happened One Night" (1934) to win all five of the top Academy Awards, for best picture, actor (Nicholson), actress (Louise Fletcher), director (Milos Forman) and screenplay (Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman). It could for that matter have won, too, for cinematography (Haskell Wexler) and editing (Richard Chew). I was present at its world premiere, at the 1975 Chicago Film Festival, in the 3,000-seat Uptown Theatre, and have never heard a more tumultuous reception for a film...Nicholson's performance is one of the high points in a long career of enviable rebels. Jack is a beloved American presence, a superb actor who even more crucially is a superb male sprite. The joke lurking beneath the surface of most of his performances is that he gets away with things because he knows how to, wants to, and has the nerve to. His characters stand for freedom, anarchy, self-gratification and bucking the system, and often they also stand for generous friendship and a kind of careworn nobility. The key to the success of his work in "About Schmidt" is that he conceals these qualities--he becomes one of the patients, instead of the liberating McMurphy. - Roger Ebert
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