Featuring what may be the
only combination abortion/acid-flashback scene in all of world cinema, The Student Nurses is nearly a credible
movie, despite the obvious come-on of the title. Made for Roger Corman’s New
World Pictures, The Student Nurses
has all the hallmarks of a late ’60s/early ’70s exploitation film—fashionable
anti-Establishment rhetoric, plentiful nudity, swaggering young people who
think they’re equipped to change the world. However, the picture wobbles
between salaciousness and seriousness, occasionally running aground in
sequences that feel like they belong in other movies, such as love-ins and
riots. The culprits behind this undisciplined storytelling are Stephanie
Rothman, who directed, and Charles S. Schwartz, who shared producing and
writing chores with Rothman. Both were prolific laborers in Corman’s B-movie factory,
but neither ever made anything of real distinction, although The Student Nurses was a big enough
success to inspire a string of “sexy nurse” movies.
The Student Nurses follows the adventures of four pretty young
women who room together while completing their nursing educations. Each gets
into a hassle of some sort, so the women help each other out of jams and learn
life lessons along the way. Lynn
(Brioni Farrell) stumbles into a social crisis involving heavily armed Latino
activists; Phred (Karen Carlson) gets involved with a gynecologist and wrestles
with squeamishness over morally complicated medical issues; Priscilla (Barbara
Leigh) has a tumultuous romance with a hippie drug dealer; and Sharon (Elaine
Giftos) bonds with a terminal patient. Tonally, the movie is all over the
place, featuring such random events as an acid trip, an attempted rape, a
colorful Day of the Dead celebration, a diatribe about food preservatives, and a
meet-cute predicated on the ordering of vegetarian dishes.
The vibe is very
much Valley of the Dolls, only
without quite as many histrionics, because Rothman and Schwartz try to play
their material straight. Had the lovely actresses cast in the lead roles
delivered better work, The Student Nurses
might have come together as a snapshot of a turbulent time in history. Alas,
because the leading ladies are mostly ornamental—their willingness to disrobe
having been a prerequisite—the film’s higher aspirations are never realized.
Still, the mere presence of such aspirations makes The Student Nurses more palatable than most films designed to
accentuate the sex lives of coeds. FYI, costar Giftos—who also appeared in the
1970 Corman production Gas!—transitioned
from this movie to a small-screen project set in the same milieu, costarring in
the 1970-1971 TV series The Interns.
The Student Nurses: FUNKY
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