Uma jovem enfermeira de uma instituição mental se torna cansada, amarga e um verdadeiro monstro para seus pacientes.Uma jovem enfermeira de uma instituição mental se torna cansada, amarga e um verdadeiro monstro para seus pacientes.Uma jovem enfermeira de uma instituição mental se torna cansada, amarga e um verdadeiro monstro para seus pacientes.
- Indicado para 4 Primetime Emmys
- 2 vitórias e 19 indicações no total
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This origin story for "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"'s Nurse Ratched looks great, as Ratched puts on a vintage dress and wreaks subtle havoc in an asylum. But the first episode was such a mess that I have zero interest in watching more.
Sarah Paulson is terrific as the chilly Ratched, and scenes like her bizarre foreplay with a random guy are pretty cool. But there are serious issues with the story and premise.
First off, her elaborate plan requires that nothing go wrong. Repeatedly in the first episode she sets something up in a way that could fail dismally but it never does. She needs no plan B, because even the stupidest plan A goes off like clockwork. It's so easy for her that she even takes risky, unnecessary steps to get herself exactly where she wants.
And if you've read the book or scene the movie then you have to question why this weird story is tied to that character. Ratched was a controlling psychopath, but ultimately she represented the cruel, cold nature of authority, which will crush anything creative or rebellious not out of mean-spiritedness as much as just because of an intolerance for chaos.
But this Ratched is actually a chaos agent, and a very different kind of psychopath. She is not a character who would become the character in Cuckoo's Nest. And this makes the tie-in nonsensical. It seems like a shoddy attempt to increase its visibility with a tie to a famous movie, but it has no respect for the character that movie created. And it's unnecessary, because there is zero reason for this tie-in. It could have been made with a nurse of any name.
In summary, Paulson is good but the series is not that interesting or believable and untrue to its presumed inspiration. Not recommended.
Sarah Paulson is terrific as the chilly Ratched, and scenes like her bizarre foreplay with a random guy are pretty cool. But there are serious issues with the story and premise.
First off, her elaborate plan requires that nothing go wrong. Repeatedly in the first episode she sets something up in a way that could fail dismally but it never does. She needs no plan B, because even the stupidest plan A goes off like clockwork. It's so easy for her that she even takes risky, unnecessary steps to get herself exactly where she wants.
And if you've read the book or scene the movie then you have to question why this weird story is tied to that character. Ratched was a controlling psychopath, but ultimately she represented the cruel, cold nature of authority, which will crush anything creative or rebellious not out of mean-spiritedness as much as just because of an intolerance for chaos.
But this Ratched is actually a chaos agent, and a very different kind of psychopath. She is not a character who would become the character in Cuckoo's Nest. And this makes the tie-in nonsensical. It seems like a shoddy attempt to increase its visibility with a tie to a famous movie, but it has no respect for the character that movie created. And it's unnecessary, because there is zero reason for this tie-in. It could have been made with a nurse of any name.
In summary, Paulson is good but the series is not that interesting or believable and untrue to its presumed inspiration. Not recommended.
I had high hopes for Ratched because of Sarah Paulsen and Ryan Murphy are involved In . but it turned out to be a huge desappointement . I have seen 5 eps so far and nothing compelling about this show . Great acting by Sarah as usual but poor script ruined everything .it seems like a cheap copy of American Horror Story . Save your time and watch AHS instead .
The writers need to do a little bit more research about the era. Without spoiling too much, the writers add diversity, but it doesn't work well at times because the writers fail to go in depth about the racism and homophobia of the era. I personally don't mind adding black or other minorities to shows. I'm a black woman myself. But why include black people in unrealistic roles in a show set in the 1940s? It's not representation. It's a complete lie and undermines the plight of black people and other minorities during that era. I saw this in Ryan Murphy's Hollywood as well. Again, sugar coating racism and homophobia. To be LGBTQ and/or a person of color was DANGEROUS back then. The stakes aren't realistically high enough in this show. If you watch the show, some parts are pretty tone deaf to the racist policies that occurred in the 40s.
Despite this, the show is okay. It's not great. I've never seen AHS so I don't have that frame of reference. The acting is very good. If you have time to waste, watch it. It's not unbearable although. Although the historical accuracy is trash.
Despite this, the show is okay. It's not great. I've never seen AHS so I don't have that frame of reference. The acting is very good. If you have time to waste, watch it. It's not unbearable although. Although the historical accuracy is trash.
Settings are pretty with pop colors.
Acting is fine.
I've been waiting the whole season for tension to build up and explode in a great finame, but it stayed constant. So the ending was a little bit disappointing.
Acting is fine.
I've been waiting the whole season for tension to build up and explode in a great finame, but it stayed constant. So the ending was a little bit disappointing.
Sarah Paulson and Cynthia Nixon give great performances, but I'm getting really really really really really really really really really really really really bored with Murphy's style over substance filmmaking. Paulson deserves better.
Representation: LGBTQIA+ Characters On-Screen
Representation: LGBTQIA+ Characters On-Screen
Celebrate the LGBTQIA+ characters that captured our imaginations in everything from heartfelt dramas to surreal sci-fi stories.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesMurphy uses color in the costumes and sets to represent themes: Yellow as Deception, Blue as Neutrality, Red as Wickedness, White as Purity, and Green as Honesty. Sometimes the costumes subtly change hue as one theme transitions to another.
- Erros de gravaçãoRoads at the time the series is set were not commonly painted in the modern fashion (double yellow "no passing" center lines and white lines along the shoulders).
- ConexõesFollows Um Estranho no Ninho (1975)
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- How many seasons does Ratched have?Fornecido pela Alexa
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