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  • Warning: Spoilers
    NIGHT CALL NURSES is another meandering skin flick from producer Roger Corman, who seemed to be trawling through various female-orientated professions in the early 1970s. This one has a trio of nurses involved with various wacky patients and bizarre characters, but always the emphasis is on sex and nudity. One scene has a Manson-style hippy holding a party where the participants are all invited to strip off and parade around; it's very seventies in feel. The only interest lies in the presence of some familiar faces, including Fulton Perry and Dick Miller, but they're not enough to make this anywhere near interesting.
  • Three young nurses by the names of "Barbara" (Patty Byrne), "Sandra" (Mittie Lawrence) and "Janis" (Alana Collins) work in the psychiatric ward of a major hospital. Initially, all three nurses were hoping to find young, single doctors for a relationship. However, as things turn out Janis becomes romantically involved with a truck driver named "Kyle Toby" (Richard Young) who is in the ward because he took too many amphetamines during in the course of his work. Likewise, Sandra falls in love with a black militant by the name of "Jude" (Felton Perry). Barbara, on the other hand, decides to attend a form of group therapy in order to overcome her sexual inhibitions. Unfortunately, while all of the young ladies are doing the best they can to realize their potential; a crazed stalker appears and threatens all of their efforts. Now rather than reveal any more of this movie and risk spoiling it for those who haven't seen it I will just say that this was a mediocre entry into the "Nurse Series". For starters, the three main actresses were all quite attractive and there were some decent scenes here and there-but there were also some rather bizarre scenes which certainly didn't help the movie as well. That said, I suppose this movie deserves about an average rating all things considered.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Jonathan Kaplan's directing career took him from Truck Turner and this movie to Heart Like A Wheel, The Accused and Brokedown Palace. Recommended to Roger Corman by Martin Scorsese, he made one of the many nurses movies that New World Pictures released.

    Written by George Armitage and Danny Opatoshu, NIght Call Nurses follows the formula or so it seems, introducing three student nurses: Janis (Alana Stewart, who was also Alana Hamilton, as she was married to both Rod and George once), Sandra (Mittie Lawrence, The New Centurions) and Barbara (Patty Byrne, Fuzz). The script changes early as this starts with a suicidal jumper and has each of the girls deal with the hospital's inefficiency, racism and sexism as their stories unfold. Sandra falls for a trucker hooked on speed. Barbara breaks a radical named Samson (Stack Pierece) out. And Sandra gets caught up in a free love cult.

    Nearly every man in this movie is horrible, from Dick Miller's sleazy truck driver and Dr. Bramlett (Clint Kimbrough) to Dennis Dugan as a transvestite nurse who is stalking the girls and isn't afraid to carry a meat cleaver. The free love encounter group also has Lyllah Torena (Fly Me) and Dixie Peabody (Bury Me an Angel) in it.

    This was the first film produced by Julie Corman. In Crab Monsters, Teenage Cavemen and Candy Stripe Nurses - Roger Corman: King of the B Movie, Kaplan said, "I'd never seen a Nurses movie. Corman laid out the formula. I had to find a role for Dick Miller, show a Bulova watch and use a Jensen automobile in the film. And he explained that there would be three nurses: a blonde, a brunette, and a nurse of color; that the nurse of color would be involved in a political subplot, the brunette would be involved in the kinky subplot, and the blonde would be the comedy subplot. The last thing he said was "There will be nudity from the waist up, total nudity from behind, and no pubic hair." Now get to work!" He soon figured out that all he had to do was "deliver the nudity, the thrills, the kinkiness, and the comedy, that had become Roger's trademark - and I did."

    I mean, it's hard to hate a movie with the tagline "It's always harder at night."
  • Sure, "Night Call Nurses" is essentially a relic of the typical product thrust upon drive-in theatres in the 1970s. There isn't much of a plot, just a whole lot of nonsense about three nurses and their exploits. There is a lot of nudity, a little humor, some slasher-film elements and a truck driver who does psychedelic drugs. Pretty ridiculous stuff overall, but not without some amusing parts. (I was scratching my head, however, with the "human machine" segment; it was interesting yet pointless).

    "Night Call Nurses" was merely one entry in the New World Films "Nurses" cycle which included "Candy Stripe Nurses" and the original "Student Nurses." While those films had a more coherent plot than this one, it is difficult to criticize this one for being so episodic and meandering because the film delivers what it promises: nude women. There are plenty here, no complaints in that category.

    And George Armitage, who went on to make the cult classic "Miami Blues," infused some wit and social commentary into the script which are also present in his own foray as writer-director into the "Nurses" cycle, "Private Duty Nurses."

    The music is all pseudo-rock and gutter-guitar blues.

    Overall, "Night Call Nurses" is a mindless time-waster, but as far as time-wasting goes you could do far worse.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I'll keep this short and simple. "Night Call Nurses" concerns three nurses who work in the psychiatric ward of a hospital. There are two plots (if you could call them that) in this movie. One involves menacing letters which are being sent to one of the nurses. The other involves a black prisoner who is currently being treated at the hospital after being roughed up in prison. The nurses fear that he could be killed if he goes back to the prison and they formulate a plan to help him escape the hospital.

    The real point of "Night Call Nurses" is to show all three of the main characters naked (plus a few other women for good measure). Of course, anyone who knew that this movie was executive produced by Roger Corman would have been able to guess what the real point of the movie was.

    Checklist: Acting? Awful. Direction? Awful. Dialogue? Awful. Lighting? Awful. Music? Awful. Ok...you get the picture. 1/10
  • I don't know what to say about "Night Call Nurses". The experience of watching it was so light and negligible I was barely aware I was watching a movie. And it was so dull that mostly, I wasn't really watching it anyway, I was just waiting for it to end.

    The movie seems to be about three nurses at a psychiatric ward. One becomes obsessed with a charismatic psychiatrist... or cult leader, another has an affair with a truck driving good ole boy with a cowboy hat, and another nurse does something with a black militant or something.

    Let's be real: there's only one reason why anybody would watch "Night Call Nurses" when it came out, and only one reason why they'd watch it now. In both cases, it's the nudity, and particularly coming from nurses, whom men fantasize about like women fantasize about firemen.

    So how's that nudity? It's pretty underwhelming. For some reason they weren't allowed to do full frontal, and thus it seems oddly restrained. There's too much... plot (?) and it's impossible to care about any of it.
  • The third entry in Roger Corman's "nurse" series marked the feature directing debut for Jonathan Kaplan, who went on to make such diverse fare as "Truck Turner", "Over the Edge", "Heart Like a Wheel", "The Accused", and "Unlawful Entry". With a script by George Armitage (who'd directed the previous nurse flick, "Private Duty Nurses"), it gives each of its three extremely comely gals their own story thread. Among other things, the gals get stalked / harassed by a creep who sends them letters, one has her consciousness raised by a new acquaintance, a black revolutionary, and another gets involved with a likable, talkative speed freak cowboy truck driver. There are some enjoyable bits throughout, if no real fireworks, but Kaplan knows full well what fans of exploitation fare want, and he delivers it - over and over again, with various scenes of delectable nudity. Naturally, the leading ladies are appealing and oh so easy to admire: the sweet Barbara (Patty Byrne), the serious minded Sandra (Mittie Lawrence), and the upbeat Janis (Alana Stewart). A fine cast of familiar faces is a true pleasure. Clint Kimbrough is the arrogant Dr. Bramlett, Felton Perry is the impassioned Jude, Richard Young is Kyle, the aforementioned truck driver, Dennis Dugan is cheerful orderly Kit, Stack Pierce is convict Jon Sampson, and the *always* welcome, and *always* funny, Dick Miller makes the most of his brief screen time as horny motorist Mr. Jensen. Armitages' script is often funny and occasionally weird (what *is* with that sequence of people pretending to be a machine?), and injects the kind of social & political commentary that was sometimes to be found in these Corman productions. Offbeat characters such as amiable compulsive flasher Bathrobe Benny (Martin Ashe) and sleazy pharmaceuticals peddler E. Eddie Edwards (Robert Staats) add to the fun. R. Michael Stringer does the slick cinematography and there's a good 'n' groovy rock soundtrack to help things move along well. Overall, this is worth watching for trash film enthusiasts. Seven out of 10.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    A trio of nurses -- sweet and perky Barbara (cute brunette Patty Bryne), sunny Janis (lovely and engaging blonde Alana Stewart), and responsible Sandra (a solid performance by Mittie Lawrence) -- really have their hands full working in a psych ward at a hospital where they have to contend with nutty patients, creepy stalkers, and black revolutionaries. Zestfully directed by Jonathan Kaplan, with a nonstop fast pace, a quirky, witty, and eventful script by George Armitage and Danny Opatoshu, an episodic, but dynamic and entertaining free-form narrative structure, polished cinematography by R. Michael Stringer, a colorful array of kooky patients (Martin Ashe in particular is a total hoot as jolly old flasher Benny), a funky-diggin' bluesy rock score, likable eccentric characters, a sharp and inspired sense of amusingly brash irreverent humor, and, naturally, a pleasing plenitude of tasty female nudity, this snappy and carefree affair provides loads of offbeat and easygoing fun. The lively acting from an enthusiastic cast rates as another a major asset: Bryne, Stewart, and Lawrence make for attractive and appealing leads, Richard Young contributes an amiable turn as loopy speed freak cowboy truck driver Kyle Toby, plus there are neat turns by Felton Perry as sarcastic ex-con Jude, Stack Pierce as charismatic political prisoner Sampson, Dennis Dugan as affable orderly Kit, and Clint Kimbrough as manipulative New Age shrink Dr. Bramlett. The ubiquitous Dick Miller has a funny bit as sleazy motorist Dr. Jensen while flash-in-the-pan 70's exploitation starlets Lynn Guthrie and Dixie Lee Peabody briefly appear as members of Bramlett's encounter group. A real blast.
  • This very episodic little exploitation flick from the '70's has three nurses of the psych ward of a local hospital as they go about their duties which revolve around dealing with flashers, suicides, horny drug-taking cowboys, ex-con black prisoners, and death threats among other things. Competently directed by Jonathan Kaplan (whom would go on to direct one of the best Blacksploitation films of the era, with "Truck Turner), this is not tightly plotted in the least bit and feels more of an excuse to get the ladies topless, which is not a detriment to the movie in the least. If you're a fan of the kitchy '70s and mostly innocent exploitation then you could do a lot worse than this mindless fluff.

    My Grade: C

    DVD Extras: Theatrical Trailer; and Trailers for "the Young Nurses" & "Student Nurses" (the latter two featuring nudity)

    Eye Candy: Patty Byrne, Mittie Lawrence, Lynne Guthrie, Dixie Peabody, & Alana Stewart all get topless; Barbara Keene supplies the T&A
  • Just recently started to view some of the work of the classic Roger Corman B movies and I must say that this 70's flick "Night Call Nurses" is plenty of fun. And true this is not your typical hospital of helping caring nurses, that is in the way you would think. As these gals are the type that will bend over backwards and break the rules to have a feel good fun time. These ladies help the desperate and deranged it's like giving into all of their patients intensive needs. You name it this film has it all from car chases, prison escapes,explosions, to strange late night love making scenes. These are the type of nurses that any man would want to check into the hospital for! Roger was clearly different a rule breaker a guy who made film for fun and with this picture it shows! Overall this is one feel good guilt pleasure flick.
  • cody-6318 May 2005
    Classic 70's low budget with very witty writing. Armitage is a genius. Very much ahead of its time in terms of the dialog concerning politics, pharmaceuticals and personal psychology. A cult classic in that sense. The character Barbara is gorgeous and the opening sequence was ripped off and used in Constantine, the latest Keanu Reeves quasi occult film. If you can get past the 70's cheese, there is a very clever and rewarding piece of writing underneath, if you don't think much or cant read between lines you'll concur with the other review. The film moves all over the place and one of the main story lines seams to get resolved in a flash. There is a classic use of voice overs to cut around a lame blonde beauty performance, but it works and is a good lesson in salvage editing for the student. The strength is in the writing of this film, seems there may have been some fluff added by the others involved and if you get the DVD, the original trailers will have you rolling on the floor.
  • Quinoa198420 July 2017
    Night Call Nurses, which follows the travails of three young ladies (as director Jonathan Kaplan says on the Shout factory DVD, it was told he had to have three girls), one involved in a rather salacious story (the girl who is tricked mentally to snap), one just involved with an amiable redneck-speed freak, and another (the black girl) with a political story as she tries to help get a guy who is on suicide watch out of the hospital, is a lot better and more fun than it has any right to be.

    Kaplan, very early in his career (and recommended by Scorsese to Corman), brought a lot to the table as a director - he tries a lot of things, not least of which having that speed freak guy having a meltdown early on (how he meets the nurse he's hooked up with) via an LSD trip where he keeps seeing mad things on the road, and overall this has a breezy, free-wheeling and shaggy feel. Not to mention this has some actually decent dramatic bits (or at least it tries, and it doesn't feel unearned), gleefully stupid twists (one of them involves, no joke, the guy who would eventually direct numerous Happy Madison productions, Dennis Dugan), and a climax that really decides to go all out on the fifteen cents they were able to throw at the thing. The girls are also good actors, or at least they *try* more than in Candy Striped Nurses, which came out two years later.

    Don't expect art; this is a joyful, sexy romp with a few wtf moments, and of course that guy Dick Miller!
  • If there was ever any proof that Roger Corman's New World Pictures would produce anything to make a buck, Night Call Nurses is it. Although, how this made money is beyond my comprehension (it is common knowledge that Corman never lost money with any films he produced). But then again, I assume this would have been predominantly show at drive-ins, and how many spectators would actually be watching the film? Anyway, the film begins with a topless girl jumping from the roof of a hospital, and then is never mentioned again, as we are introduced to our trio of "sexy" psychiatric nurses, Barbara (Patty Byrne), Janis (Alana Stewart), and Sandra (Mittie Lawrence).

    The film is simply a series of non-sequential, rambling, unconnected stories (and story is too strong a word for the concept). We see a cowboy-style trucker, Kit (Dennis Dugan), who comes in cause he is tripping, starring at his hands (this scene is repeated later, as he enters a lighting fantasy in a truck cab, as he stars at his mirrored hands). Bathrode Benny (Martin Ashe) exposes himself at regular intervals, and the nurses break several doctor/patient restrictions by have relationships with patients (Janis with the tripping trucker, and Sandra with a black revolutionary that wasn't pleasant when they first met).

    Barbara however, bizarrely gets therapy, but is then forced into psychosis, which manifests itself in a group meeting, where a bunch of clichéd hippie-types sitting round a living room, as the male doctor encourages the women in the group to take their clothes off, in a bid to shake off any lack of confidence - it's this side of the sexual revolution that is rarely talked about, the lecherous side of men. There are also a series of car chases, explosions and smuggling out a revolutionary, but it's all just very silly and pointless. Kit does however, have one great (but very silly) piece of dialogue. Being seen out of the hospital by Janis, he reads her name badge: "Janis. Is that your name, or the name of your left titty?" Yeah, it's juvenile, but within the context of this pointless drama, it is a joy amongst the nonsense.

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  • You have 3 friends who work at a psych ward in a hospital. One deals with a trucker who has a trip out, one who wants to help out a revolutionary, and one who gets to be a guinea pig. They have a close bond working in the hospital. Each one that have a dream of their own. No one says no to what needs to be done. They work without a strife. Lots of sexual encounters and the energy is played out in the film. It's like a skin flick, with a little bit of eroticism. Just tame. A classic for the collection. 2.5 out of 5 stars