Electronics Store
 Location:  Home» Blu-ray Disc » Genres » One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest [Blu-ray]  
SubCategories
Genres
Action & Adventure
African American Cinema
Animation
Anime & Manga
Art House & International
Classics
Comedy
Cult Movies
Documentary
Drama
Educational
Fitness & Yoga
Horror
Kids & Family
Military & War
Music Video & Concerts
Musicals & Performing Arts
Mystery & Suspense
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Special Interests
Sports
Television
Westerns
Grade Level (feature_five_browse-bin)
Preschool
Kindergarten
Elementary School
Middle & High School
College
Post-Graduate
Audio Type (feature_six_browse-bin)
Digital Sound
Dolby
Surround Sound
Information
Home Theater Forum
Returns / Refunds
Shipping Policies
Contact Us

Electronics Retailer: Consumer Electronics: Home Theater

Our Electronics Retailer Store offers Online Shopping for a huge selection of Electronics including Home Theater, Audio, Video, Receivers, Amplifiers Speakers, Subwoofers, Plasma, LCD, DLP, LCoS, HDTV, HD-DVD, Blu-ray, DVD Players, DVDs, Movies, CDs, Music, Gadgets, Video Games, Xbox, Playstation, Nintendo and much more. One of the largest Electronics Retailers on the Internet. We hope you enjoy shopping at the Shack!

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest [Blu-ray]

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest [Blu-ray]


Other Views:
Director: Milos Forman
Actors: Jack Nicholson, Louise Fletcher, William Redfield, Michael Berryman, Peter Brocco
Studio: Warner
Category: DVD

List Price: $34.99
Buy New: $23.95
You Save: $11.04 (32%)

Qty In Stock


New (22) Used (3) from $21.49

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 304 reviews
Sales Rank: 4448

Format: Color, Special Edition, Widescreen
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: Blu-ray
Region: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 133 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: 00417
UPC: 883929004171
EAN: 0883929004171
ASIN: B00168IWU0

Theatrical Release Date: 1975
Release Date: July 15, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Similar Items:

  • Chinatown (Special Collector's Edition)
  • Cool Hand Luke [Blu-ray]
  • Midnight Cowboy
  • Taxi Driver (Two-Disc Collector's Edition)
  • Bonnie and Clyde [Blu-ray]

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com essential video
One of the key movies of the 1970s, when exciting, groundbreaking, personal films were still being made in Hollywood, Milos Forman's One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest emphasized the humanistic story at the heart of Ken Kesey's more hallucinogenic novel. Jack Nicholson was born to play the part of Randle Patrick McMurphy, the rebellious inmate of a psychiatric hospital who fights back against the authorities' cold attitudes of institutional superiority, as personified by Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher). It's the classic antiestablishment tale of one man asserting his individuality in the face of a repressive, conformist system--and it works on every level. Forman populates his film with memorably eccentric faces, and gets such freshly detailed and spontaneous work from his ensemble that the picture sometimes feels like a documentary. Unlike a lot of films pitched at the "youth culture" of the 1970s, One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest really hasn't dated a bit, because the qualities of human nature that Forman captures--playfulness, courage, inspiration, pride, stubbornness--are universal and timeless. The film swept the Academy Awards for 1976, winning in all the major categories (picture, director, actor, actress, screenplay) for the first time since Frank Capra's It Happened One Night in 1931. --Jim Emerson

Product Description
Warner Brothers One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (Blu-ray) A nice rest in a state mental hospital beats a stretch in the pen, right? Randle P. McMurphy (Jack Nicholson), a free-spirited con with lightning in his veins and glib on his tongue, fakes insanity and moves in with what he calls the "nuts." Immediately, his contagious sense of disorder runs up against numbing routine. No way should guys pickled on sedatives shuffle around in bathrobes when the World Series is on. This means war! On one side is McMurphy. On the other is soft-spoken Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher), among the most coldly monstrous villains in film history. At stake is the fate of every patient on the ward.


Customer Reviews:   Read 299 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Movie: 4.5/5 Picture Quality: 2.75~4/5 Sound Quality: 1.5/5 Extras: 2.5/5   September 1, 2008
LGANS316 (Tokyo Japan)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Title: One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Version: U.S.A / VC-1 BD-25 / Region Free
Running time: 2:13:42
Movie size: 17,720,721,408 bytes
Disc size: 21,099,357,516 bytes
Average video bit rate: 14.25 Mbps

Dolby Digital Audio English 640 kbps 5.1 / 48kHz / 640kbps
Dolby Digital Audio English 192 kbps 1.0 / 48kHz / 192kbps
Dolby Digital Audio French 192 kbps 1.0 / 48kHz / 192kbps
Dolby Digital Audio German 192 kbps 1.0 / 48kHz / 192kbps
Dolby Digital Audio Italian 192 kbps 1.0 / 48kHz / 192kbps
Dolby Digital Audio Spanish 192 kbps 1.0 / 48kHz / 192kbps
Dolby Digital Audio Spanish 192 kbps 1.0 / 48kHz / 192kbps

Subtitles: English / Danish / Dutch / Finnish / French / German / Italian / Japanese / Korean / Norwegian / Portuguese / Spanish / Swedish
Number of chapters: 34

#Audio Commentary
#Documentary: "The Making of 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'" (SD, 47 minutes)
#Deleted Scenes (SD, 19 minutes)
#Theatrical Trailer (SD)
#Collectible Booklet - Digi-book - 32-page, full color booklet.



4 out of 5 stars How Times Change   August 31, 2008
Brennan Gordon (San Francisco, CA, USA)
While I commend the excellent acting of the main characters, I found the film to be boring. After an hour of Nicholson's antics and conflict with the hospital--enough already! The believability is poor. No wonder the novel's author sued. When the Chief is carrying the cabinet, he can barely walk and breathe. But the next shot shows it flying out the heavy-metal screened window like it was launched from a catapult. That action clearly made enough noise to awaken most of the hospital, yet we see many of the patients in that very ward slowly waking up due to other noise.


5 out of 5 stars One of the best acted movies ever!   August 17, 2008
skidoo (USA)
The story is not just great--the acting is what really makes it. The acting is supreb, and I'm not just talking about Nicholson! I LOVE the scene where Sydney Lassick (Charley Cheswick) throws a temper tantrum wanting his cigarettes. It is so convincingly real! It was not under or over acted. He hit the nail on the head with that scene. And it is also one of the funniest--especially when the orderlies think Taber is freaking out when he is actually getting burned with a cigarette). Just excellent!


5 out of 5 stars "She Likes A Rigged Game."   July 20, 2008
H. F. Corbin (ATLANTA, GA USA)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

At one point in this movie that is one of the great classics of American films, McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) says of Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher) that "she likes a rigged game." And does she ever. She will keep order and conformity at all costs and has to be one of the most despised characters in filmdom. Watching the sparks fly between her and Nicholson as the inmate who fakes mental illness to get sent from prison to a psychiatric hospital is a joy to behold. Both Fletcher and Nicholson, who has never been better in a role, received Oscars for their performances as did the director Milos Forman ("Amadeus"). The film, adapted from the Ken Kesey novel, won best picture as well.

From the opening credits to the closing horrifying scene, this movie holds you in its spellbinding clutches. I cannot recall as good a group of supporting actors as the psychiatric inmates. The are totally convincing and you almost believe that they are actual patients and not acting.

The film makes a compelling statement about the way we treat mental illness in this country as well as so-called professionals who refuse to listen to their patients.

While there are many moments here that will make your laugh, the last few minutes of the film are as dark as anything you will see. It is even better than I remembered.



5 out of 5 stars The movie was the first to win all five major Academy Awards   July 20, 2008
B. Donereu (Celebration, Florida)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

This is, without doubt, one of the greatest movies ever produced. Milos Forman won best director for his magnificent work on the adaptation of Ken Kesey's novel by the same name. But this movie is so much more than that. The acting was flawless - considering the roles, that is not an easy feat. In the beginning we meet Randle P. McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) who was sentenced to prison for inappropriate relations with a fourteen year old, finds his way onto a work release program. He finds himself an out with poor workmanship and deranged behavior - he is transferred to a mental institution and believes his sentence will be easier served. After all, he just has to lay back and act like a nut. But this is easier said than done, as he quickly discovers playing a simple game of basketball. Aside from maintaining his sanity, he meets his head ward at the institute Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher), who won best actress, plays her role flawlessly.

The mild mannered yet unrelenting head nurse becomes McMurphy main antagonist as he bets the other patients that he (McMurphy) can get under Ms. Ratched's bonnet (meaning drive her crazy) What does he have to lose? once his sentence is completed he is out of there. Of course, what McMurphy doesn't know is that his release can only come from the approval of the institute - Ms. Ratched has the power to keep him there indefinitely. It doesn't take McMurphy long to realize that he's never going to be released so he ends up forming friendships with the other patients.

The group includes Billy Bibbit (Brad Dourif), a suicidal, stuttering and helpless young man whom Ratched has humiliated and dominated, and "Chief" Bromden (Will Sampson), believed by the patients to be deaf and unable to speak, Chief is mostly ignored but also respected for his enormous size. In Billy, McMurphy sees a younger brother figure whom he wants to teach to have fun, while the Chief ultimately becomes his only real confidant, as they both see their struggles against authority in similar terms. Aside from some misadventures, ( hijacking a bus, a boat, and a rendezvous on the city streets) everything goes accordingly until one fateful night. McMurphy sneaks into the nurse's office and calls his girlfriend. After a successful bribe of the guard she sneaks into the asylum and all heck breaks loose. I will leave it there, but there is a reason this movie won all major awards and swept the Oscars. With actors such as: Jack Nicholson, Scatman Crothers, Danny DeVito, Christopher Lloyd, Vincent Schiavelli and Sydney Lassick this is one movie that will earn a place unto your favs. list.


Qty In Stock