Backdrop
Carry On Nurse

Carry On Nurse (1959)

1h 26m | PG-13

⭐ 6.3 / 10

In Haven Hospital, a certain men's ward is causing more havoc than the whole hospital altogether. The formidable Matron's debut gives everyone a chill every time she walks past, with only Reckitt standing up to her. There's a colonel who's a constant nuisance, a bumbling nurse, a romance between Ted York and Nurse Denton, and Bell wants his bunion removed straight away, so after a couple of pints, the men decide to remove the bunion themselves!

Director: Gerald Thomas

Studio: Peter Rogers Productions

Genre: Comedy

Video: 720p

▶ Watch

Cast

Wilfrid Hyde-White

Wilfrid Hyde-White

as The Colonel

Terence Longdon

Terence Longdon

as Ted York

Kenneth Connor

Kenneth Connor

as Bernie Bishop

Kenneth Williams

Kenneth Williams

as Oliver Reckitt

Charles Hawtrey

Charles Hawtrey

as Humphrey Hinton

Hattie Jacques

Hattie Jacques

as Matron

Reviews

By CinemaSerf

Hattie Jacques rules the nurses with a rod of iron as the matron; Wilfred Hyde-White has them all dancing to his tune as the "Colonel" and the rest of patients seem to be in far more danger inside this ward in the "Haven Hospital" than they might be outside walking down the motorway! Things lurch from minor disaster to minor disaster until "Jack" (Leslie Phillips) has to have his bunion operation deferred. He has other, urgent, plans and after a few glasses of bubbly the patients decide that this surgery is a dawdle, take over a theatre in the dead of night and attempt to remove it themselves! Enough to make your eyes water! Jacques was always in her element as the authoritarian figure and there are some fun pranks afoot to get revenge for her ruthlessness from both the poorly folks and from her put-upon nursing staff too. The humour is simple, there's a touch of slapstick and even a wee bit of romance - as well as some over sterilised catheter tubes and plenty of quirky character-driven sub-plots to give each of the cast their moment in the sun. Not my favourite, it's a bit too obvious much of the time - but it's still watchable if you get into the (surgical) spirit of the thing.