The Young Nurses | |
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Directed by | Clint Kimbrough |
Written by | Howard R. Cohen |
Produced by | Julie Corman |
Distributed by | New World Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 77 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Young Nurses is a 1973 film directed by Clint Kimbrough. It was the fourth in the popular "nurses" cycle for New World Pictures, starting with The Student Nurses (1970). [1] [2]
Three sexy, female health care workers expose a drug ring that is operating from inside a big city hospital.
Julie Corman had produced two "three girls" movies for New World, Night Call Nurses and The Student Teachers. She says Frances Doel, who was story editor at New World, was married to actor Clint Kimbrough, who wanted to direct. He asked Julie Corman to produce. She was reluctant until he said, “Julie, you’re the only one I could trust. I know you’ll have my back. I know you’ll help me.” So she agreed. [3]
Critic Nathaniel Thompson wrote in his review for Turner Classic Movies that the film "feels more like an intended Pam Grier vehicle as Michelle (Cleopatra Jones' Angela Elayne Gibbs) juggles her time [...] between her nursing job and taking care of the drug dealers who are destroying her friends and neighborhood," and "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." [4] Writing in Slant , critic Budd Wilkins noted that director "Kimbrough brings a solid televisual style to the film, though the story's nothing more than boilerplate," and "if you've ever wanted to see [actor] Fuller kneed in the nuts and then shanked with a syringe, here's your chance." [5]
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