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L'hôpital

Original title: The Hospital
  • 1971
  • PG-13
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
7.7K
YOUR RATING
L'hôpital (1971)
An over-burdened doctor struggles to find meaning in his life while a murderer stalks the halls of his hospital.
Play trailer2:43
1 Video
56 Photos
Dark ComedyMedical DramaSatireComedyDramaMystery

A hospital's chief-of-staff struggles to find meaning in his life during a spate of staff deaths.A hospital's chief-of-staff struggles to find meaning in his life during a spate of staff deaths.A hospital's chief-of-staff struggles to find meaning in his life during a spate of staff deaths.

  • Director
    • Arthur Hiller
  • Writer
    • Paddy Chayefsky
  • Stars
    • George C. Scott
    • Diana Rigg
    • Barnard Hughes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    7.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Arthur Hiller
    • Writer
      • Paddy Chayefsky
    • Stars
      • George C. Scott
      • Diana Rigg
      • Barnard Hughes
    • 90User reviews
    • 41Critic reviews
    • 72Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 7 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:43
    Official Trailer

    Photos56

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    Top cast76

    Edit
    George C. Scott
    George C. Scott
    • Dr. Herbert Bock
    Diana Rigg
    Diana Rigg
    • Barbara Drummond
    Barnard Hughes
    Barnard Hughes
    • Drummond…
    Richard Dysart
    Richard Dysart
    • Dr. Welbeck
    • (as Richard A. Dysart)
    Stephen Elliott
    Stephen Elliott
    • Dr. Sundstrom
    Donald Harron
    Donald Harron
    • Milton Mead
    Andrew Duncan
    Andrew Duncan
    • William Mead
    Nancy Marchand
    Nancy Marchand
    • Mrs. Christie
    Jordan Charney
    Jordan Charney
    • Hitchcock
    Roberts Blossom
    Roberts Blossom
    • Guernsey
    Lenny Baker
    Lenny Baker
    • Dr. Schaefer
    Richard Hamilton
    Richard Hamilton
    • Dr. Ronald Casey
    Arthur Junaluska
    • Mr. Blacktree
    Kate Harrington
    • Nurse Dunne
    Katherine Helmond
    Katherine Helmond
    • Marilyn Mead
    David Hooks
    • Dr. Einhorn
    Frances Sternhagen
    Frances Sternhagen
    • Mrs. Cushing
    Robert Walden
    Robert Walden
    • Dr. Brubaker
    • Director
      • Arthur Hiller
    • Writer
      • Paddy Chayefsky
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews90

    7.17.7K
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    Featured reviews

    7xredgarnetx

    Great character drama and black comedy

    George Scott gave the performance of a lifetime in Paddy Chayefsky's THE HOSPITAL, a very dark drama about an aging big city hospital and a middle-aged physician on the verge of suicide. Along comes Diana Rigg as a free spirit determined to save him from himself. Their dialog crackles, and it is clear they are made for each other from the outset. But will she save him? Their one sex scene is both graphic and memorable for its passion and fury. Meanwhile, the hospital is under siege by a group of agitators who don't want it to turn a condemned building into a cancer center. And a serial killer is loose in the hospital, specializing in doctors and nurses. A good part of the movie, though, is squarely focused on Scott. As it should be. What a difference a few years made back when this movie was made. 1962 had given us THE INTERNS, a hokey, old-fashioned reworking of DR. KILDARE with terrible acting and a cardboard script. Along came 1971 and THE HOSPITAL. Less than 10 years later. Hollywood did something right for a change. Watching THE HOSPITAL today is a reminder of how much medical shows like ST. ELSEWHERE and SCRUBS owe to this enduring classic. And if THE HOSPITAL reminds you of NETWORK, it should. Same scripter.
    9bkoganbing

    Taking Your Life In Your Hands

    Anybody who goes to the Manhattan Hospital Center is taking his life in his hands. That includes the staff of The Hospital.

    I had never seen The Hospital before and I was intrigued at how similar the characters and situations of the plot were to that other Paddy Chayefsky masterpiece, Network. There are elements in George C. Scott's character that have both Al Schumacher's and Howard Beale's.

    He's the administrator of The Hospital and he's mad as hell and not going to take it any more. He's completely estranged from his wife and kids. It takes a Faye Dunaway type character in the person of Diana Rigg to make him snap out of it. One roll in the hay with her and he's shocked back to reality and the fact he still can contribute in the world.

    But first he's got a real problem. Someone is out killing hospital staff, four of them in a 48 hour period. And the nice part is their deaths can be attributed to in large part to the general incompetence of a medical bureaucracy. That's where the comedy comes in.

    There is an actual Howard Beale type character in the person of Barnard Hughes, Diana Rigg's father. His end is not quite as dramatic as Beale's though.

    Back in my working days it was part of my job to pay medical suppliers. Some of them could be as big creeps as you'll find portrayed in The Hospital. The black comedy satire had some real bite to it for me.

    George C. Scott was nominated for Best Actor, but having won and refused to accept the previous year's Oscar for Patton, he wasn't about to get a second chance. He lost to Gene Hackman for The French Connection. Still his handling of the role is unforgettable.

    Try viewing The Hospital back to back with Network and see how many similarities you spot.
    7secondtake

    A bustling, sharply written, dated but also timely look at the changing world of 1971

    Hospital (1971)

    George C. Scott is amazing, just terrific as a struggling, aging, world-weary doctor. A couple of the speeches he gives (from the sharply written screenplay) are first rate quotable stuff. See this movie for him alone.

    Overall, this is certainly a New Hollywood movie, straight out of the late 1960s politics and sexual revolution. It's also a bit of a middle-aged male fantasy (the director and writer and main actor being of course all middle aged males). I mean, a key line in the movie is when young and slightly batty Barbara, played by Diana Rigg (Emma Peel in the television series "The Avengers"), says to the very middle aged George C. Scott, "I have a thing for middle aged men." Or something to that effect--and you know what happens next.

    But that's the weakest part of the movie. The best part is the hospital scene itself, the chaotic and scary lack of medical professionalism at an under-funded big city medical center. Scott plays the chief of medicine, Dr. Bock, and he gradually sniffs out a truly murderous element to the place, a kind of whodunnit built into this otherwise growing drama of doctors inside and protesters outside (usually) and a general sense that the old order isn't able to keep order against the rising restlessness of young people and their demands.

    In a way, the flakiness of Barbara and the rock-steady but yet suicidal authority of Bock are symbolic of the two sides, the two generations, that signified so much back then. Barbara suggests dropping out and turning on, and the doctor grows to the idea. I mean, who wouldn't in his shoes, having Diana Rigg begging you to leave your miserable job and life and moving to the mountains of Mexico to make babies. That's no exaggeration--that's the carrot, and the doctor sees it the way many people saw it then, the escape as a reasonable alternative to a crumbling world.

    And yet, the hospital has needs, like dying people, and a group of people displaced from their apartment building next door, and of course this murderer on the loose.

    In a way, it's a sloppy, terribly constructed movie. But it has an element of abandonment and realism from the era that really works. If you just go along with the superficial parts of the plot, which are fun, you might just get sucked into the tawdry medical world in 1971 Manhattan.

    The writer, by the way, is Paddy Chayefsky, and he won his second Oscar for this screenplay. It was considered that timely and sharp at the time, and there is some terrific writing, some really good dialog to keep it humming. (He did a ton of television, but also next wrote the screenplay for "Network," winning his third Oscar for that.)

    The director, Arthur Hiller, moved from 1960s television to movie directing and made a lot of middling fare, though a few became well known such as "Love Story" (1970) and "Man of La Mancha" (1972). The cinematographer Victor J. Kemper is straight out of New Hollywood and his style feels beautifully unpolished and complex (he went on to do a lot of solid movies, some really terrific like "Dog Day Afternoon"), and this helps hold the disparate plot elements together.
    harry-76

    Hospital or Looney Bin?

    It's hard to tell in this scenario. We've all heard about (or maybe even experienced) some quirky stuff in hospitals, but this one (fashioned by Paddy Chayefsky) really takes the cake.

    Seldom has there been such an odd assortment of patients, staff and docs under one roof. Agreed some reforms are needed in the medical profession which warrant exposing.

    But Chayefsky creates a circus, replete with sexually maladjusted interns, an Indian medicine man performing out-patient rites, and a mad killer stalking the corridors for victims and bopping them over the head. That George C. Scott keeps a straight face must be one of the great acting feats of '71.

    The script goes so over-the-top that it gives that term a new meaning. Enough to make one want to cancel their Medicare and go alternative all the way.

    Where's that grape seed extract and Noni juice?
    10cer1

    A must see for anyone who's spent any time in one!

    Certainly the highlight of this film is it's cast.

    Diana Rigg, George C. Scott, Bernard Hughes to mention a few.

    I have accumulated more time in hospitals and with doctors over the years than I care to think about.

    This comedy attacks the pomp and pretension in all aspects of our society, through the setting of one of it's "Most Haughty" institutions... the Medical profession.

    The idea that such goings on could be possible, might be a shock to some, but is a delight to anyone with the perspective of experience.

    Dr Brock (Scott) undergoes a mid-life crisis of monumental proportions before our eyes as we, and he, become enamored with the prospect of his involvement with Miss Drummond (Rigg).

    The thread of the absurd is woven into this wonderful mix in the form of the irony that the Hospital appears to be killing it's own workers as they mismanage their affairs in it.

    The climax is unpredictable (unless you've seen it) and made even more hilarious if you happen to guess.

    It's not everyone's brand of humor, to be sure, and has uproariously funny "Dark Moments" if you're open to them.

    I loved every minute, and was delighted to see it out on DVD.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Dr. Herbert Bock rants, "We have established the most enormous, medical...entity ever conceived and people are sicker than ever!" the slight pause, searching for the word "entity", was spontaneously ad-libbed by George C. Scott to save the take. The scripted line was, "we have ASSEMBLED the most enormous medical ESTABLISHMENT ever conceived." Scott heard his slip in mid-sentence, so he reworded the line so as to not make it repetitive. Director Arthur Hiller loved the save so much he used that take in the movie.
    • Goofs
      Barbara Drummond says that she lived for a year with the Hopi Indians, but she mispronounces "Hopi" as "Ho-pye."
    • Quotes

      Herbert Bock: I mean, where do you train your nurses, Mrs. Christie--Dachau?

    • Crazy credits
      Although Barnard Hughes played two distinct roles, the end credits lists Hughes as playing the role of Drummond but not Dr. Mallory.
    • Connections
      Featured in Best! Movies! Ever!: Hospitals (2007)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 11, 1972 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Hospital
    • Filming locations
      • Metropolitan Hospital -1901 First Avenue, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA(hospital)
    • Production company
      • Simcha Productions.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $19,711,560
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 43 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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