Tag: brad dourif

  • ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ TV Spin-Off in Development

    Jack Nicholson in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'. Photo: United Artists.
    Jack Nicholson in ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’. Photo: United Artists.

    Preview:

    • A ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ TV adaptation is in development.
    • It’ll focus on the character of the Chief from the 1975 Oscar winner.
    • Producer Paul Zaentz, one of the rights holders, is behind the new project.

    There are always concerns when a spin-off of a classic movie is announced. Will it tarnish the legacy of the original? Will it go off in some random direction and end up far less entertaining than the movie from which it derives?

    In the case of 1975’s multiple Oscar-winning drama ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’, there is plenty of reason to worry. But with the rights in the hands of producer Paul Zaentz –– nephew of ‘Cuckoo’ producer Saul Zaentz –– it appears the forward movement on a TV take on the story is proceeding with all due caution and respect.

    3169

    Talking on indie filmmaking podcast CK Café, Zaentz revealed that he’s made a deal to put a ‘Cuckoo’s Nest’ TV series into development.

    Related Article: Diane Kruger, Ray Nicholson and director Neil LaBute Talk ‘Out of the Blue’

    What was the story of ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’?

    Jack Nicholson in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'. Photo: United Artists.
    Jack Nicholson in ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’. Photo: United Artists.

    The movie, directed by Milos Forman, was written by Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman, and adapted both Ken Kesey’s book and the play created from it by Dale Wasserman.

    It follows a unruly convict Randle Patrick McMurphy (Jack Nicholson), who is sent to a psychiatric hospital for evaluation in 1963 Oregon, and encourages his docile companions to take more control of their lives and defy the tyrannical head nurse.

    Chief Bromden (played in the movie by Will Sampson) is the towering half-Native American patient who pretends to be deaf and mute. Over time, the antics of protagonist McMurphy coax him out of his disguise and he becomes a symbol of powerful resistance and emancipation. The book focuses more on Bromden.

    ‘Cuckoo’s cast also includes Danny DeVito, Scatman Crothers, Brad Dourif, Nathan George, Christopher Lloyd and Vincent Schiavelli, with Louise Fletcher memorably playing the tyrannical Nurse Ratched, who rules the wards with an iron grip.

    Kesey famously didn’t like the film, feeling that it deviated too far from the source.

    While he might not have approved of the adaptation, audiences and critics certainly did; it earned $109 million worldwide on a $3 million budget, and won five Academy Awards from eight nominations, including Best Picture, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Actor for Nicholson, Best Actress for Fletcher and Best Director for Forman.

    What will the ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ TV series focus on?

    (L to R) Will Sampson and Jack Nicholson in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'. Photo: United Artists.
    (L to R) Will Sampson and Jack Nicholson in ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’. Photo: United Artists.

    Here’s what Paul Zaentz told the podcast about the show:

    “I’ve signed an agreement with Ken Kesey’s widow to develop a TV series which we’ll make through the point of view of the Chief for the first season. Following the first season, we’ll see what happens to the Chief after he escapes [from the psychiatric hospital].”

    Beyond that, details are scarce on this one –– Zaentz has yet to reveal who might be writing the show, or whether he has a studio involved.

    And it’s not the first time someone has approached him and the other rights holders about a remake or spin-off.

    Michael Douglas, who was also among the producers on the original, told Deadline as part of a retrospective earlier this year, that the team has been careful in what they agree to:

    “[Paul] has been very selective and I think that was the only time they’ve done one, which is good because so much gets remade these days…as for the series, it was ok, just ok. I wasn’t very much involved, to be honest.”

    The “series” in question was 2020’s Ryan Murphy-produced Netflix series ‘Ratched,’ which charted the earlier days of the title character.

    With Sarah Paulson in the lead, ‘Ratched’ is set in in 1947, when Mildred Ratched begins working as a nurse at a leading psychiatric hospital. But beneath her stylish exterior lurks a growing darkness.

    The show received mixed-positive reviews but hasn’t progressed past its original season. Paul Zaentz was involved as a producer.

    In the podcast interview, he’s clear that he doesn’t think that targeting classic movies for remakes in the traditional theatrical sense is worth it, but that TV can be a place for more nuance and character development, offering the chance to do something fresh.

    When will the ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ TV series be on screens?

    With no creative team, cast or even production company/network or streamer involved yet, it’s far too early to guess when this might arrive.

    Still, Netflix –– which backed ‘Ratched’ and has also been behind TV adaptations of movies such as ‘Ripley’ –– might well be a leading candidate to take this on.

    (L to R) Jack Nicholson and Will Sampson in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'. Photo: United Artists.
    (L to R) Jack Nicholson and Will Sampson in ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’. Photo: United Artists.

     

    List of TV Series Adapted from Movies:

    Buy ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ on Amazon

    zO0EIM38
  • ‘Deadwood’ Forever: Other Great Performances By The HBO Series’ Cast Members

    ‘Deadwood’ Forever: Other Great Performances By The HBO Series’ Cast Members

    HBO

    Today HBO’s acclaimed series “Deadwood” comes at long last to an end with a two-hour film reuniting its colorful characters one last time. At the time of its premiere 14 years ago, many of its leads were hard-working character actors hoping for a breakout role, while others were longtime performers looking for a comeback. Creator and showrunner David Milch gave each of them unforgettable calling cards that exploded and expanded their careers, opening doors on television shows and movies alike. To commemorate the series’ overdue conclusion, Moviefone scoured the filmographies of the show’s incredible cast for some of the incredible work they did before, during and especially after appearing on one of the most groundbreaking, mesmerizing television shows ever.

    Lionsgate

    Ian McShane – “Sexy Beast” (2000), “John Wick” (2014)

    It’s hard to believe that the would-be star of “Deadwood” went 13 years (from 1987 to 2000) without a film credit given his mesmerizing screen presence, but McShane’s comeback feels especially appropriate: in Jonathan Glazer’s “Sexy Beast,” he plays a stoic mob boss who does and says almost nothing, and still manages to be absolutely terrifying. He’d later provide echoes of both that role and his “Deadwood” turn as Continental manager Winston in the action-packed “John Wick” franchise.

    20th Century Fox

    Timothy Olyphant – “The Girl Next Door” (2004), “Justified” (2010)

    When “Deadwood” was cancelled after its third season, Olyphant moved on to a familiar, equally memorable challenge with the acclaimed television series “Justified,” where he again played a rigid lawman. But immediately before starting on Milch’s show, he stole Luke Greenfield’s “Risky Business” riff “The Girl Next Door” as a calculating, charismatic pimp who throws a wrench into the plans of an overachieving high school senior.

    Netflix

    Molly Parker – “The Center of the World” (2001)

    Molly Parker has, for most of her career, been a bit of an indie darling, so it comes as no surprise that years before joining Milch’s show, she already transfixed audiences in Wayne Wang’s idiosyncratic drama about a Vegas stripper who confounds a dot-com millionaire who hires her to spend the weekend with him.

    Showtime

    Paula Malcolmson – “The Hunger Games” (2012), “Ray Donovan” (2013)

    Like many of the show’s stars, Malcolmson went on to appear in a number of high profile television series, including “Ray Donovan,” where she has a starring role opposite Liev Schreiber. But prior to that, she signed on for a choice gig as Katniss Everdeen’s troubled mother in the “Hunger Games” franchise.

    Roadside Attractions

    John Hawkes – “Winter’s Bone” (2010), “Martha Marcy May Marlene” (2011)

    Few actors even on this show have the versatility of the great John Hawkes, who went on to play a terrifying meth addict opposite Jennifer Lawrence in Debra Granik’s “Winter’s Bone,” and followed up that performance with another one as a charismatic, mysterious cult leader in Sean Durkin’s “Martha Marcy May Marlene.”

    Momentum Pictures

    Dayton Callie – “Abattoir” (2016)

    Callie has long been one of Milch’s repertory players, popping up over and over again in his various television projects. But in Darren Lynn Bousman and Chris Monfette’s “Abattoir,” he plays the mysterious caretaker of a house built out of rooms where terrible things happened, and he effortlessly conveys the menace and gravitas of that responsibility.

    Warner Bros.

    Brad Dourif – “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” (1975), “Child’s Play” (1988)

    Dourif’s Doc Cochran was often the heart of Milch’s series, which may come as a surprise to fans of his earlier work, which includes his breakthrough turn as a delicate mental patient opposite Jack Nicholson in Milos Forman’s 1975 Oscar winner, as well as the voice of iconic movie monster Chucky in the “Child’s Play” films.

    Radius-TWC

    Robin Weigert – “The Good German” (2006), “Synecdoche, New York” (2008), “Concussion” (2010)

    Weigert’s Calamity Jane stole many scenes — and hearts — over the series’ three seasons, and she has quietly done the same in a number of acclaimed movies, disappearing into roles in Steven Soderbergh’s exercise in period filmmaking “The Good German,” Charlie Kaufman’s melancholy mind-bender “Synecdoche” before breaking out again in the lesbian drama “Concussion.”

    20th Century Fox

    W. Earl Brown – “There’s Something About Mary” (1998) 

    As Al Swearengen’s Number Two, Dan, Brown was forced to tackle some tough challenges, but he’d already proven himself more than capable in a variety of movie and TV roles, perhaps most notably playing Warren, the disabled brother of Cameron Diaz’ Mary in the Farrelly brothers’ raunchy but as always surprisingly sweet 1998 comedy.

    Warner Bros.

    William Sanderson – “Blade Runner” (1982), “Newhart” (1982)

    More than two decades before playing the Grand Hotel’s oily, scheming proprietor E.B. Farnum, Sanderson became known to moviegoers as the tender, troubled inventor J.F. Sebastian in Ridley Scott’s groundbreaking sci-fi classic, and then pulled a 180 in more than 90 episodes of the sitcom “Newhart” playing Larry, the dimwitted brother to two Darryls.

    20th Century Fox

    Kim Dickens – “Gone Girl” (2014)

    Kim Dickens is one of Hollywood’s most reliable character actors, appearing in films and television roles with equal ease and skill. For David Fincher, she played a doubtful detective searching for clues in the disappearance of Nick Dunne’s wife Amy before winning acclaim in not one but two popular television series, “House of Cards” and “Fear the Walking Dead.”

    Orion Pictures

    Ricky Jay – “House of Games” (1987), “Boogie Nights” (1997)

    Ricky Jay’s pedigree as one of David Mamet’s regular played made him ideal for the role of a smart-talking card sharp and hustler in “Deadwood,” but he had already convincingly played a con artist in Mamet’s breakthrough film “House of Games,” and delivered a decidedly more avuncular performance as Jack Horner’s unflappable cinematographer in Paul Thomas Anderson’s ode to the 1970s porn industry “Boogie Nights.”

    Paramount Vantage

    Garret Dillahunt – “No Country For Old Men” (2007), “The Assassination of Jesse James” (2007), “Raising Hope” (2014), “Widows” (2018)

    Few actors got a bigger bounce from “Deadwood” than Dillahunt, who was so good that Milch killed him off and then brought him back in another role. Just a year after the show ended he delivered memorable turns for both the Coen brothers and Andrew Dominik in two more Western-themed projects, then transitioned into a sitcom star with “Raising Hope” before delivering a powerful supporting performance as a dedicated but feckless driver in Steve McQueen’s feminist crime film “Widows.”