The Hospital (1971) Apr 2026

The Hospital (1971): A Prescription for Institutional Madness

The film is set within a sprawling, chaotic New York City teaching hospital that is literally and figuratively falling apart. It follows (George C. Scott), the brilliant but deeply depressed Chief of Medicine. Bock is at the end of his rope: his wife has left him, his children are estranged, and he is struggling with impotence and suicidal ideation. The Hospital (1971)

Released in 1971, The Hospital is a biting, absurdist black comedy that remains one of the most savage critiques of American institutional life ever put to film. Directed by Arthur Hiller and written by the legendary Paddy Chayefsky , it serves as a spiritual precursor to Chayefsky’s later masterpiece, Network (1976), applying the same "mad as hell" energy to the medical profession. A System in Cardiac Arrest Bock is at the end of his rope:

As Bock contemplates his own end, the hospital around him descends into a surreal nightmare of incompetence and accidental death: The Hospital (1971) - Ruthless Reviews A System in Cardiac Arrest As Bock contemplates