Night Call Nurses


1h 20m 1972

Film Details

MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Erotic
Release Date
Jun 1972
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Santa Clara Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
New World Pictures
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 20m
Color
Color

Synopsis

Nurses Barbara, Janis and Sandra live together and work in the psychiatric ward of an urban hospital. One day, a young patient climbs to the hospital roof and, before Sandra can stop her, jumps to her death. Barbara and Janis attempt to ease Sandra's sense of guilt, and all are distracted by the arrival of a new patient on the prison ward, Jon Sampson, a notorious Civil Rights activist and prison reformer who has supposedly attempted suicide. Janis tends to another new patient, cowboy trucker Kyle Toby, who is hallucinating after taking too many amphetamines in order to clock enough driving hours to pay off his truck. With the care of Janis and kind orderly Kit, Kyle is subdued and treated. Barbara, meanwhile, tries to cheer up patient Miles Bailey, a millionaire hospital patron who was burned by a disgruntled employee, causing such severe facial disfigurement that his head is wrapped in gauze, but he sends her away. Later, Sandra receives a note written in lipstick that threatens rape. The girls laugh at the note, then gently dissuade "Bathrobe Benny" from his customary afternoon flashing episode. At night, Barbara unwinds by skydiving and then having sex with her boyfriend Zach. The following day, ex-convict Jude attempts to find Jon in the hospital, but when Warden Kelley bars his way, he appeals to Sandra, who is African American, for help. Although she initially claims that Jon is not there, she is swayed by Jude's passionate plea to save the reformer, who was shot by prison authorities to discourage his activities. Agreeing to pass on a message, she promises to contact Jude later. While Barbara fends off a corrupt pharmaceutical company representative, a recovered Kyle asks Janis for a date. Later, the nurses try to relax in the break room, but young patient Chloe wanders in naked, terrified by orderly Bert, who pretends to be insane. Over the weekend, Janis goes waterskiing with Kyle, and when they go to a bar that night, Bert is there and attacks Kyle, who is forced to fight Bert and his buddy. Afterward, he and Janis have sex. At the same time, Barbara and Zach attend an encounter session run by psychiatrist Dr. Bramlett, who leads the group of young men and women in an orgy in order to "make a single organic entity" to give "us a greater understanding of who and what we are." He then administers a personality test, and as he is handing out the answers, Barbara goes inside the house to get a drink. Bramlett is recording the session, and Barbara hears his voice on the tape telling the other participants not to reveal to Barbara that her test revealed her to be a deviant personality. Later, during a discussion session, the men encourage the women to strip to prove that they are comfortable with their bodies. Barbara, who has remained mostly silent all day, refuses and is labeled a "hostile cop-out." Pushed, she reveals what she heard, but the others deny it, causing Barbara to cry and run out. On the street, she accepts a ride from a man in a sports car, but is increasingly confused mentally, recalling Bramlett's words about her deviant tendencies. She wanders the streets all night, paranoid and confused. The next morning, she drives to Bramlett's house and tries repeatedly to run him down as he jogs along the street. She then collapses into sobs, allowing him to soothe her. Wondering if anxiety made her hear what she did, Bramlett asks her about her sex life, then offers to sleep with her to help break through her inhibitions. Meanwhile, at the hospital, Sandra sneaks onto the prison ward through a locked back door and relays Jude's message to the patient. Jon reveals that his life is in grave danger from the prison authorities, but assures her that it does not matter whether he lives or dies, as his followers will consider him a martyr if he is murdered and continue his work. That night, Sandra and Jude discuss how to release Jon, then have sex. At the same time, while Janis is sleeping with Kyle, Barbara is with Bramlett, each couple unaware that someone wearing a nurse's uniform is watching them. When Sandra asks Janis to help her smuggle Jon out, Janis is unsure until Sandra reminds her that she became a nurse to help people and save lives. Janis and Barbara both receive threatening letters written in lipstick, but remain unconcerned, joking about the various psychopaths on their ward. When Barbara has sex with Bramlett again, however, they are watched from inside the apartment by the letter writer and Peeping Tom, orderly Kit, now dressed in drag as a nurse. Bramlett tells Barbara, who is falling in love with him, that their relationship is merely professional, then confesses that he set up the pre-recorded tape so she would "accidentally" overhear the false statement that she was deviant. He cheerfully informs her that she has proven his theory that a sane person can be driven into a psychotic state just by being told that she is insane. She threatens to report him and have his license removed, but they are interrupted by Kit, who pulls out a knife and then slams Bramlett in the head with a glass tumbler. Kit announces he will now punish Barbara, but when she appeals to his ethical responsibility to save a patient, he helps her attend to Bramlett. Meanwhile, Janis distracts Jon's guard, allowing Sandra to sneak Jon out of his room and up the back stairs. Wrapping his face to disguise him as Mr. Bailey, Sandra wheels Jon outside, where Jude is waiting. Just then, the warden returns and finds the prisoner gone, then spots the trio in the parking lot. Commandeering a car with a furious female owner inside, he follows them as they drive to the hills. There, Jude drives into a dark cave, and while Sandra helps Jon to the street beyond, where Kyle and Janis wait in his truck with two of the prisoner's friends, the warden runs into the cave with his gun drawn. Seeing the trio get into the truck, the warden shoots one of Jon's friends, who then returns fire and kills the official. Kyle drives off, but as he has once again been taking amphetamines, begins hallucinating and driving erratically. When a police car spots them and gives chase, Kyle evades it by speeding down the twisting mountain curves. Jon's friend fashions a crude bomb and throws it out the window onto the police car, disabling it. The group drives to the airport, where they escort Jon and his friends onto a plane out of the country. As Kyle, Janis, Sandra and Jude celebrate, Barbara strides down her street, triumphant.

Film Details

MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Erotic
Release Date
Jun 1972
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Santa Clara Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
New World Pictures
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 20m
Color
Color

Articles

The Nurses Collection: Roger Corman's Cult Classics - Roger Corman's Cult Classics: The Nurses Collection


Inspired by the trend of "three young girls" films like Three Coins in the Fountain that culminated in Jacqueline Susann's '60s pop culture sensation Valley of the Dolls, Roger Corman hit upon a durable formula that served him well throughout the 1970s: take three beautiful young women working in a single industry, give them each a sexy or cutting edge storyline of their own, mix well with some acceptable levels of T&A, and voila! Box office gold.

This recipe for success extended to a string of films Corman made at New World involving stewardesses and fashion models, but its most famous incarnation is easily the quintet of nurse films made from 1970 to 1974. Four of these (minus the first one, The Student Nurses) are gathered in a two-disc set from Shout Factory entitled Roger Corman's Cult Classics: The Nurses Collection as part of its lavish ongoing line of Corman releases, and interestingly, the four are scrambled way out of order for reasons never made quite clear.

First up in the set but last to be released chronologically is Candy Stripe Nurses, directed by UCLA grad Alan Holleb (who only made one other film, the high school ghost comedy School Spirit). As a curtain closer for the series, it makes a more than appropriate intro as well as it follows three young women working as volunteer nurses, all for very different reasons. Sandy (the late Candice Rialson from Hollywood Boulevard) ostensibly takes her assignment to be close to her doctor boyfriend, but she spends much of her time bedding both the staff and patients. Dianne (soap actress Robin Mattson) actually does want to be a physician and hopes the experience will get her on the right path, while troubled Marisa (María Rojo) has to work as community service duty after getting involved in a nasty knife fight on school grounds. Their misadventures include a series of attempted and completed sexual assaults, proving the innocence of a wounded man accused of a robbery, tangling with familiar drive-in actors like Dick Miller and Sally Kirkland, and even trying to cure the impotence of an over-the-hill rocker. It all climaxes, naturally, with a basketball game, a tire-screeching car chase against time, and an emergency room crisis. The film is mainly Rialson's show, however, and it's not hard to see how she amassed a sizable cult following; not surprisingly, Corman used her again the same year for the not dissimilar Summer School Teachers. Also, the cut-rate "animated" opening titles (complete with rocking theme song) are not to be missed.

Then we move back chronologically to the third of the nurse cycle, Night Call Nurses, an unexpected offering from director Jonathan Kaplan (who went on to helm The Accused, Over the Edge, and White Line Fever) and writers George Armitage (future director of Miami Blues and Grosse Pointe Blank) and Danny Opatsohu (Get Crazy). This time the location shifts somewhat to a hospital psych ward, where the patients range from truly bonkers to politically revolutionary. The action stars with a pre-credits sequence involving a partially POV-shot suicide jump off the hospital roof, after which the film careens through the antics of brown-haired Barbara (Patti Byrne), soul sister Sandra (Mittie Lawrence), and perky blonde Janis (Alana Stewart). They have the work through the usual quagmire of disturbed patients, frowning supervisors, horny attendants, and flaky boyfriends, all scored to growling rock music. Oh, and character actor Dennis Dugan runs around in drag wagging a cleaver and leaving creepy notes for all of our heroines. It's all good fun, and while the actresses aren't quite up to the caliber of the other film on this disc, they're still strong, beautiful, and brave enough to keep the sometimes random chain of events grooving along just fine.

The only extra on disc one is the 14-minute "Anatomy of a Nurse Film," which features both Kaplan and Holleb recalling how they got their start at New World. They talk at length about Corman's intentions for the films including necessary product placements, the exact parameters of female nudity to include, and the roles each girl would play (blonde = comedy storyline, brunette = kinky, "girl of color" = political). Kaplan gets the funniest moment talking about the unorthodox methods suggested to convince an actress to go topless, which involves scouting for hookers on Sunset Boulevard.

The second disc then hops back another entry in time to the flimsiest offering of the entire series, Private Duty Nurses, which was both written and directed by Armitage. It's far from his most accomplished feature, however, and apart from an interesting soundtrack contribution from semi-obscure '70s rock band Sky, it's mostly a wash. The fatigue here is obvious as this is basically a less humorous rehash of The Student Nurses, with another curvy threesome navigating a sea of obstacles including a drug smuggling ring, racial discrimination against the hiring of black doctors, and, uh, marine pollution. Very little of it has a connection to the actual hospital, and while the nightclub and biker scenes have some interest as snapshots of '70s SoCal life, the lack of narrative direction ultimately grounds the entire enterprise. For the record, the three nurses this time around are Spring (TV actress Kathy Cannon), Lola (Joyce Williams), and Lynn (Pegi Boucher).

Finally we hit the fourth chronological film of the series and last in the set, 1973's The Young Nurses, which was the only directorial effort for Corman actor Clint Kimbrogh (Bloody Mama). At times this one feels more like an intended Pam Grier vehicle as Michelle (Cleopatra Jones' Angela Elayne Gibbs) juggles her time Coffy-style between her nursing job and taking care of the drug dealers who are destroying her friends and neighborhood. It all leads to none other than cult director Samuel Fuller in a small but pivotal role as a corrupt doctor! Comic actor Allan Arbus (M*A*S*H) pops up as well, one year after his astonishing turn in Robert Downey's Greaser's Palace. The other storylines are far less interesting, with Kitty (Jeane Manson) and Joanne (Ashley Porter) getting a grip on a boat racing competition and the best way to wriggle out of their tight nurse uniforms.

The second disc also features only one extra, but it's a keeper. In the 12-minute "Paging Dr. Corman," both Roger and his wife/producer Julie talk about starting off New World on the right foot and their own ingredients for the series, including the fact that the girls always had to solve their own problems and the integration of political elements like news voiceovers in the background. Julie also has some great observations about women's liberation at the time and society's restrictions, such as the fact that she herself couldn't get a credit card in her own name because she was married. No theatrical trailers are included for any of the films, but they are available on various other drive-in trailer collections.

All of these films were previously released on DVD by Corman's New Horizons label, but these were essentially bare bones and featured atrocious transfers from very dated, full frame video masters (several of which were actually cropped instead of open matte). They also appeared in unauthorized, watermarked transfers with even cruddier transfers as part of Infinity's lackluster Presenting Roger Corman's...Best of B*s Collection 2: Naughty Nurses & Tawdry Teachers , which should be avoided at all costs. All four looks infinitely better in the Shout Factory collection with satisfying 1.78:1 anamorphic transfers, rich colors, appropriate film grain levels in the darker scenes, and vastly improved black levels; across the board, it's a major upgrade in every respect.

For more information about Roger Corman's Cult Classics: The Nurses Collection, visit Shout! Factory.

by Nathaniel Thompson
The Nurses Collection: Roger Corman's Cult Classics - Roger Corman's Cult Classics: The Nurses Collection

The Nurses Collection: Roger Corman's Cult Classics - Roger Corman's Cult Classics: The Nurses Collection

Inspired by the trend of "three young girls" films like Three Coins in the Fountain that culminated in Jacqueline Susann's '60s pop culture sensation Valley of the Dolls, Roger Corman hit upon a durable formula that served him well throughout the 1970s: take three beautiful young women working in a single industry, give them each a sexy or cutting edge storyline of their own, mix well with some acceptable levels of T&A, and voila! Box office gold. This recipe for success extended to a string of films Corman made at New World involving stewardesses and fashion models, but its most famous incarnation is easily the quintet of nurse films made from 1970 to 1974. Four of these (minus the first one, The Student Nurses) are gathered in a two-disc set from Shout Factory entitled Roger Corman's Cult Classics: The Nurses Collection as part of its lavish ongoing line of Corman releases, and interestingly, the four are scrambled way out of order for reasons never made quite clear. First up in the set but last to be released chronologically is Candy Stripe Nurses, directed by UCLA grad Alan Holleb (who only made one other film, the high school ghost comedy School Spirit). As a curtain closer for the series, it makes a more than appropriate intro as well as it follows three young women working as volunteer nurses, all for very different reasons. Sandy (the late Candice Rialson from Hollywood Boulevard) ostensibly takes her assignment to be close to her doctor boyfriend, but she spends much of her time bedding both the staff and patients. Dianne (soap actress Robin Mattson) actually does want to be a physician and hopes the experience will get her on the right path, while troubled Marisa (María Rojo) has to work as community service duty after getting involved in a nasty knife fight on school grounds. Their misadventures include a series of attempted and completed sexual assaults, proving the innocence of a wounded man accused of a robbery, tangling with familiar drive-in actors like Dick Miller and Sally Kirkland, and even trying to cure the impotence of an over-the-hill rocker. It all climaxes, naturally, with a basketball game, a tire-screeching car chase against time, and an emergency room crisis. The film is mainly Rialson's show, however, and it's not hard to see how she amassed a sizable cult following; not surprisingly, Corman used her again the same year for the not dissimilar Summer School Teachers. Also, the cut-rate "animated" opening titles (complete with rocking theme song) are not to be missed. Then we move back chronologically to the third of the nurse cycle, Night Call Nurses, an unexpected offering from director Jonathan Kaplan (who went on to helm The Accused, Over the Edge, and White Line Fever) and writers George Armitage (future director of Miami Blues and Grosse Pointe Blank) and Danny Opatsohu (Get Crazy). This time the location shifts somewhat to a hospital psych ward, where the patients range from truly bonkers to politically revolutionary. The action stars with a pre-credits sequence involving a partially POV-shot suicide jump off the hospital roof, after which the film careens through the antics of brown-haired Barbara (Patti Byrne), soul sister Sandra (Mittie Lawrence), and perky blonde Janis (Alana Stewart). They have the work through the usual quagmire of disturbed patients, frowning supervisors, horny attendants, and flaky boyfriends, all scored to growling rock music. Oh, and character actor Dennis Dugan runs around in drag wagging a cleaver and leaving creepy notes for all of our heroines. It's all good fun, and while the actresses aren't quite up to the caliber of the other film on this disc, they're still strong, beautiful, and brave enough to keep the sometimes random chain of events grooving along just fine. The only extra on disc one is the 14-minute "Anatomy of a Nurse Film," which features both Kaplan and Holleb recalling how they got their start at New World. They talk at length about Corman's intentions for the films including necessary product placements, the exact parameters of female nudity to include, and the roles each girl would play (blonde = comedy storyline, brunette = kinky, "girl of color" = political). Kaplan gets the funniest moment talking about the unorthodox methods suggested to convince an actress to go topless, which involves scouting for hookers on Sunset Boulevard. The second disc then hops back another entry in time to the flimsiest offering of the entire series, Private Duty Nurses, which was both written and directed by Armitage. It's far from his most accomplished feature, however, and apart from an interesting soundtrack contribution from semi-obscure '70s rock band Sky, it's mostly a wash. The fatigue here is obvious as this is basically a less humorous rehash of The Student Nurses, with another curvy threesome navigating a sea of obstacles including a drug smuggling ring, racial discrimination against the hiring of black doctors, and, uh, marine pollution. Very little of it has a connection to the actual hospital, and while the nightclub and biker scenes have some interest as snapshots of '70s SoCal life, the lack of narrative direction ultimately grounds the entire enterprise. For the record, the three nurses this time around are Spring (TV actress Kathy Cannon), Lola (Joyce Williams), and Lynn (Pegi Boucher). Finally we hit the fourth chronological film of the series and last in the set, 1973's The Young Nurses, which was the only directorial effort for Corman actor Clint Kimbrogh (Bloody Mama). At times this one feels more like an intended Pam Grier vehicle as Michelle (Cleopatra Jones' Angela Elayne Gibbs) juggles her time Coffy-style between her nursing job and taking care of the drug dealers who are destroying her friends and neighborhood. It all leads to none other than cult director Samuel Fuller in a small but pivotal role as a corrupt doctor! Comic actor Allan Arbus (M*A*S*H) pops up as well, one year after his astonishing turn in Robert Downey's Greaser's Palace. The other storylines are far less interesting, with Kitty (Jeane Manson) and Joanne (Ashley Porter) getting a grip on a boat racing competition and the best way to wriggle out of their tight nurse uniforms. The second disc also features only one extra, but it's a keeper. In the 12-minute "Paging Dr. Corman," both Roger and his wife/producer Julie talk about starting off New World on the right foot and their own ingredients for the series, including the fact that the girls always had to solve their own problems and the integration of political elements like news voiceovers in the background. Julie also has some great observations about women's liberation at the time and society's restrictions, such as the fact that she herself couldn't get a credit card in her own name because she was married. No theatrical trailers are included for any of the films, but they are available on various other drive-in trailer collections. All of these films were previously released on DVD by Corman's New Horizons label, but these were essentially bare bones and featured atrocious transfers from very dated, full frame video masters (several of which were actually cropped instead of open matte). They also appeared in unauthorized, watermarked transfers with even cruddier transfers as part of Infinity's lackluster Presenting Roger Corman's...Best of B*s Collection 2: Naughty Nurses & Tawdry Teachers , which should be avoided at all costs. All four looks infinitely better in the Shout Factory collection with satisfying 1.78:1 anamorphic transfers, rich colors, appropriate film grain levels in the darker scenes, and vastly improved black levels; across the board, it's a major upgrade in every respect. For more information about Roger Corman's Cult Classics: The Nurses Collection, visit Shout! Factory. by Nathaniel Thompson

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Although the onscreen credits included a copyright statement for Santa Clara Productions, Inc., the film was not registered for copyright. Before the opening credits there is a brief scene, without dialogue, in which a young, female psychiatric patient commits suicide by jumping off the hospital roof. Following a close-up of the girl's smashed doll, the credits roll, beginning with a series of still photographs of each of the three main female stars. The closing credits begin with a sequence of still shots of the three stars hugging and laughing.
       Night Call Nurses marked the motion picture debut of film and television director Jonathan Kaplan, who went on to direct The Accused, starring Jodie Foster, in 1988. Although modern sources credit Kaplan as the editor of Night Call Nurses, in the onscreen credits he is listed only as director. Modern sources add Lyllah Torena to the cast as an encounter group member.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States September 1974

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1972

Feature directorial debut for Jonathan Kaplan.

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1972

Released in United States September 1974