The second in a loose series of sexy-nurse
flicks made by Roger Corman’s New World Pictures, this pointless but nearly respectable
drama was the directorial debut of George Armitage, who later found his niche
with such gonzo projects as Vigilante
Force (1975) and Grosse Pointe Blank
(1997). Throughout Private Duty Nurses,
one can feel Armitage struggling to integrate substantial topics, and to his
credit the exploitive bits of the movie pass quickly. However, Private Duty Nurses ends up failing on
two levels—it’s neither the eroticized romp promised by lurid marketing
materials nor a serious drama with sociopolitical heft. In trying to serve two
masters, Armitage ended up making something formless and forgettable.
As per
the norm of the sexy-nurse cycle, Private
Duty Nurses follows the personal and professional lives of a group of
attractive young RNs. Lola (Pegi Boucher) is an African-American woman who
dates a black doctor campaigning against racist hiring practices at their
hospital. Lynn (Pegi Boucher) romances an ecological activist who investigates
connections between mysterious deaths and oceanic pollution. And bleeding-heart
blonde Spring (Kathy Cannon) tries to coax a tormented Vietnam vet into health
with sex and TLC. There’s also a meandering subplot about the girls’ landlord,
Dewey (Paul Hampton), a creepy would-be stud who seduces one of the ladies back
to his bachelor pad, only to prove virtually impotent. And, naturally, one of
the girls gets raped, because apparently no ’70s exploitation movie was
considered complete without sexual assault.
Within individual scenes, Armitage
generates fleeting moments of credible drama. He’s at his best depicting the
weird dissonance between Dewey’s come-on routines and the man’s shoddy bedroom
performance. Armitage does weird well—but weird is not the coin of this
particular realm, and Armitage (who also wrote and produced the picture)
displays zero interest in delivering a straight-up skin show. Although he
manages to get each of his leading actresses topless at some point, the
director’s boredom with such B-movie bits as extended scenes of dirt-bike
racing is evident. It doesn’t help that the cast lacks any standouts. (Minor
exception: Hampton’s oily turn as Dewey.) The leading actresses are attractive
and some of them are more competent performers than others. Meanwhile, jobbing
actors including Paul Gleason, Herbert Jefferson Jr., and Robert F. Simon
deliver work that’s merely adequate.
Nonetheless, proving that one should never
underestimate the power of salacious marketing, Private Duty Nurses did well enough to justify a continuation of
the sexy-nurse cycle. Three more movies followed.
Private
Duty Nurses: FUNKY
1 comment:
The band that appears in this movie is future Knack frontman Doug Fieger's early band The Sky
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