Ratched, Netflix review: Ryan Murphy has lost the plot with this absurd show

Sarah Paulson stars as Nurse Mildred Ratched
Sarah Paulson stars as Nurse Mildred Ratched

Just as HBO gave us the Perry Mason origin story we never wanted, so Netflix is giving us the One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest backstory we never asked for. Producer Ryan Murphy, creator of Glee and American Horror Story, and writer Evan Romansky have taken it upon themselves to rewrite a character who had a perfect, unsullied existence within the confines of a classic film.

Nurse Ratched comes a respectable fifth in the American Film Institute’s list of the 100 greatest movie villains, behind Hannibal Lecter, Norman Bates, Darth Vader and the Wicked Witch of the West. As played by Louise Fletcher, she was unknowable. In Ratched, set 15 years earlier and with Sarah Paulson in the lead role, it’s all show and tell. I suppose Netflix are aiming this  at a young audience who have never seen the film, and for them it might work. But tonally this is so far removed from the original that it inhabits  a different universe.

One Flew Over  the Cuckoo’s Nest reimagined as quirky fun? You got it! The Technicolor palette is more suited to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, the costumes make Ratched and her fellow nurses look like they’re modelling Dior.  The comic-book violence is as almost as lurid as the set design; a lobotomy performed by means of an ice pick to the eyeball, with accompanying sound effects.

The plot begins with Mildred Ratched arriving unannounced at Lucia State Hospital. She is determined to work there, for reasons that remain mysterious until the end of the first episode, and what Ratched wants, she gets. Jon Jon Briones plays the shifty doctor in charge of the hospital, where he performs experimental treatments and which looks like a very expensive spa hotel.

Judy Davis is Nurse Bucket, who vies for supremacy with Ratched, and is one of the best things here. Paulson’s Ratched is a cartoon villain, coolly bumping people off in episode one, but then becoming softer and – supposedly – more sympathetic as the series draws on.

This is less a character arc, more a sense of a drama out of control. Which jars, because the Nurse Ratched we know was all about control. There is no order or sense to the way Paulson behaves. What to say about the portrayal of mental illness, except that the usually reliable Sophie Okonedo hams it up royally as a character with multiple-personality disorder? “She’s lost her mind. I think she’s lost several of ’em,” says Nurse Bucket, which just about sums up the show’s subtlety.