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The idea of flying over the madhouse is that Mike is a naturally anti-establishment rebel, and when the social elite defines him as a fool and takes him into the asylum for observation, Mike realizes that it's not the crazy people there who are sick, but the damn social order of the social elite and the private social order of the power class, which makes a lot of people who can't adapt to it marginalized, and finally feels that he is mentally ill, and voluntarily hides in the madhouse, and finally submits to this crazy order, and Mike knows that he can't lift the pump, but he still tries to try The "patients" in the asylum began to rebel, and the elites noticed this, believing that the order they had created would be shaken and broken by Mike, and decided to lobotomize Mike and make him a real madman to preserve this order.
And when the chief saw that Mike had become really crazy, he decided to run away with Mike's soul, and picking up the pump meant that people usually don't try things that they think are impossible, and how do you know you can't do them if you don't try?!
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It took more than two hours to finish watching the film, which won five Oscars in 1975. I didn't understand at the beginning of the ending of the film: why did the chief suffocate Murphy to death?
If you look closely, you'll see that Murphy's frontal lobe has been removed after the electric shock, and it's no different from a wasted person. The Chief knew that Murphy liked to pursue freedom and could not bear to see him alive as a walking corpse, so he killed him. The film satirizes the suppression of freedom of thought in American society at the time....
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Because the chieftain represented some of the silent Americans of the time, who were no longer silent. The reason why he suffocated Mike to death with a pillow shows that he finally understands that Mike is right to escape. He wanted to die with dignity and not live like dementia.
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1. "One Flew Over the Asylum" has a strong class view, and satirizes the negative phenomena in the real society through irony and warnings.
2. This film is a masterpiece of American social and political films in the 70s. Director Milos Foreman excels not only in his successful portrayal of the original film, but also in his classic Hollywood language for articulating a rebellious theme. Although the film adopts the theme of psychopaths, which is often discussed in Hollywood films, it has a deep allegorical and sharp irony, full of irony, and the narrative level is perfectly combined with the metaphorical level.
The main reason why people give "One Flew Over the Asylum" is that the film conveys a rebellious spirit of pursuing freedom, which is also manifested in the unwillingness to submit to the system, the courage to fight, the courage to break free from the shackles of thought, and help the people around them awaken. McMurphy, played by the male protagonist Jack Nicholson, is the soul of the film, and plays a role in the plot and height of the entire movie. He vividly portrays a cynical, witty pseudo-psychopath. >>>More