Doctors and Nurses (film)

Doctors and Nurses is a 1981 Australian comedy film directed by Maurice Murphy. The gimmick is child actors play doctors and nurses and adults play patients.[2]

Doctors and Nurses
Directed byMaurice Murphy
Produced byBrian Rosen
Written byMorris Gleitzman
Doug Edwards
Robn Moase
Tony Sheldon
Maurice Murphy
Based onan original idea by Maurice Murphy
StarringBert Newton
Richard Meikle
Graeme Blundell
CinematographyJohn Seale
Distributed byClassic Films
Release date
1981
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
BudgetA$400,000[1]

Cast

Reception

Filmink magazine later said "I’ve got to say, I used to watch this on VHS when I was eight and remember loving it. I haven’t seen it since I was eight. Amazing cast"[3]

Horror Movie and Goose Flesh

After making the movie, Maurice Murphy and Brian Rosen decided to make a follow up project, shooting two films back to back, Horror Movie and Goose Flesh, budgeted at $500,000 each.[4] The movie had the same plot line but Horror Movie was a straight film whereas Goose Flesh was a comedy. The same cast and crew would be used.[2]

Filming starting in Sydney in April 1981. A scene would be shot straight then re-shot as a comedy. However the film ran out of money and filming stopped after a week. Brian Rosen was left with $700,000 debt.[2]

gollark: Since basically all the JS I've seen uses the second one.
gollark: If I saw the top one (and it wasn't in an event like this where everyone will second-guess everything) I would assume that it was written by someone who used C(++) a lot.
gollark: e.g. if you have some JS code, and you see that the author used ```javascriptfunction deployBee(){}```brackets and not```javascriptfunction deployBee() {}```ones, you need to know a bit about what JS code normally looks like to infer anything like that.
gollark: I don't think so. Things like variable names and formatting are *fairly* obvious, although you may need to read a decent sample of code in language X to learn what people generally do there regarding those, but stuff like what constructs are generally used for tasks in language X are not.
gollark: Wait, he said it *wasn't* good, oh dear.

References

  1. Jim Schembri, "Doctors & Nurses", Australian Film 1978-1992, Oxford Uni Press, 1993 p73
  2. David Stratton, The Avocado Plantation: Boom and Bust in the Australian Film Industry, Pan MacMillan, 1990 p34-345
  3. Vagg, Stephen (29 February 2020). "Top Ten 10BA Knock Offs". Filmink.
  4. "Production Survey", Cinema Papers, May–June 1981 p169


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