Transactional Analysis concepts illuminated through film and clinical experience Transactional Analysis theory can feel abstract when studied from textbooks alone. The Cuckoo's Nest: Exploring the World of Psychotherapy through Film, by Certified Transactional Analyst Anoushka Beazley, maps TA concepts onto popular films, autobiographical training vignettes, and clinical case studies. Each chapter links a specific TA concept to all three lenses, rendering complex psychological ideas accessible without sacrificing theoretical density. The book traces Beazley's four-year postgraduate training journey, grounding Eric Berne's social psychological theory of personality in lived clinical experience. Each chapter pairs an autobiographical vignette of her own training with a client case study and a detailed film analysis demonstrating the concept in action. This layered structure functions as both a TA encyclopedia for students and an engaging guide for film-literate general readers. Readers will also find: Detailed analyses of popular films that demonstrate how Transactional Analysis concepts manifest in recognizable character dynamics and relational patternsAutobiographical vignettes documenting the author's postgraduate psychotherapy training, offering an authentic account of professional development over four yearsClient case studies illustrating how specific TA concepts appear in the therapy room and inform clinical interventionAccessible explanations of Eric Berne's social psychological theory of personality suitable for Diploma and Masters level studyA structure connecting theory, practice, and film that supports both formal psychotherapy coursework and independent self-directed learning Written for psychotherapy students at Diploma and Masters level as well as general readers interested in understanding human behavior, The Cuckoo's Nest uniquely connects Transactional Analysis theory with clinical practice and film analysis, offering a multidimensional resource for anyone seeking deeper insight into relational dynamics.