This is meant to be a movie that turns preconceptions upside
down—just like McMurphy realizes that this isn’t what he signed up for, the
viewers should go through a similar transformation. I want them to really hate
McMurphy when he shows up and then I want them to become as attached to him as
the patients are. At every corner of the hospital, I want there to be reminders
that the staff control every single aspect of the patients’ lives and every
attempt to give the patients the illusion of choice is as transparent to
McMurphy as it is to the audience.
McMurphy
is as rebellious as they come and I think it is imperative that this shows
clearly—even as he is trying to be cooperative in the beginning. His sly
remarks must read as subtle jabs and his banters should be right on the edge of
genuine. He knows he’s in a mental hospital, but he still has belief in his
fellow man. He should be the only healthy person to speak to the patients as
one sane man speaks to another. While the nurses may occasionally soften their
voices or speak slowly and clearly, Mcmurphy assumes that they are as present
in their minds as he is. Ratched is the only exception to this rule. Still,
this is the mistake he and Ratched make—because they are mental patients, they
are mentally unstable. They make radical decisions without considering their
effects on an unhealthy mind. McMurphy gets them to break the rules and start
rebelling while Ratched berates them and humiliates them, further degrading
their mental states. This all comes to a head when Billy kills himself when he
hears the threats Ratched makes. Just when the viewer starts to believe that
these patients are getting better—just as Billy speaks without a stutter for
the first time, Ratched says something that would barely faze a sane man, but
Billy, as we come to understand, is not a sane man. None of them are and
everyone is brought back to square one.
Likewise,
the patients are all there for a reason, and as such, most of the conversations
between them and the outside world should be at least somewhat awkward and a
little uncomfortable. They are not used to having such a smooth speaker and
alpha male as McMurphy in their ranks and by the end it should be an honor for
them to be in his company. This man is what little of the outside world that
they get to see regularly and soon he becomes a symbol of the man they must be
like to function on the outside—especially for Billy, who refuses to leave
because he is no prepared.
This
also becomes a new experience for McMurphy, who was an alpha male on the
outside, but never had much of a following. Here, McMurphy has a chance to be
in an environment where he really is mentally superior to everyone he
encounters and, as such, is able to get people to do things through his
charisma. This McMurphy is the complete opposite of the McMurphy after the
lobotomy. Throughout most of the film, he is trying to escape and in the end he
does with the help of the Chief. The most important idea about this movie is
that nothing is ever as simple as it seems and even in a controlled environment
like a hospital, terrible, unexpected things can happen when something new is
introduced.
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