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Sick Nurses (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region All

Prachya Pinkaew (Producer)
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Sick Nurses (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Produced by Prachya Pinkaew (Ong Bak, Tom Yum Goong), 2007 Thai horror movie Sick Nurses was selected to screen in the Hawaii International Film Festival to wildly favorable reception. Co-writer-directors Piraphan Laoyont and Thatsaporn Siriwat have managed to inject a welcome dose of morbid energy into the genre, offering an abundance of exploitative fun with creative gory kills and damsels-in-distress running around in sexy outfits. The scare-fest is set in a hospital in Bangkok, where a young doctor and seven gorgeous nurses are secretly making profits from selling dead bodies in the black market. But they are going to meet their deserved end soon, as a vengeful spirit comes back to off them one by one in the most gruesome ways possible...
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Technical Information

Product Title: Sick Nurses (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) 恐怖護理站 (DVD) (香港版) 恐怖护理站 (DVD) (香港版) Sick Nurses (香港版) Sick Nurses (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
Producer: Prachya Pinkaew 巴猜平橋 巴猜平桥 プラッチャヤー・ピンゲーオ Prachya Pinkaew
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Release Date: 2009-06-02
Language: Thai
Subtitles: English, Traditional Chinese
Country of Origin: Thailand
Picture Format: NTSC What is it?
Aspect Ratio: 1.78 : 1
Widescreen Anamorphic: Yes
Sound Information: Dolby Digital 5.1
Disc Format(s): DVD
Region Code: All Region What is it?
Duration: 83 (mins)
Publisher: Kam & Ronson Enterprises Co Ltd
Package Weight: 120 (g)
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1020298591

Product Information

At a Thai hospital, a doctor and his seven unbile nurses engage in the sale of bodies. Jealousy causes Tawan, one of the nurses, to threaten to blow the whistle on the practice, so the others murder her. The dealer in bodies doesn't arrange for delivery of Tawan's corpse for a full week. As midnight approaches on the seventh day after the murder, each of the remaining nurses as well as Dr. Taa, faces a suernatural revenger. In flashbacks we see the events leading up to the murder and realize the full range fo relationships among the main characters, including the duplicitors Dr. Taa and Tawan's sister, Nook.
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Sick Nurses (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)"

June 2, 2009

Although the modern Asian ghost genre continues to languish in the creative doldrums, it does throw up the occasional gem, such as the delirious Sick Nurses from Thai directors Thospol Siriwiwat and Piraphan Laoyont. A truly whacked-out and imaginatively grotesque variation on the tired old themes, the film has been gathering somewhat of a cult reputation, playing at festivals and having already earned itself an international DVD release.

The basic set up sounds depressingly familiar - a group of nurses at a hospital are haunted and killed by the vengeful ghost of Tahwan (Chol Wajananont), a colleague they murdered after she discovered their black market organ trading. Making matters even more tragic is the fact that the killing was masterminded by her own sister Nook (Chol Wajananont) as a means of stealing her man, the suave doctor and head of the cadaver selling operation, Tah (Vichaya Jarujinda). According to local legend, a ghost has until midnight to return and visit her loved ones, and sure enough Tahwan appears and starts taking bloody revenge in a variety of increasingly bizarre ways.

Although the above synopsis may be enough to discourage understandably jaded genre fans, Sick Nurses delivers the goods in a most unexpected and refreshingly unrestrained manner. Rather than the usual investigative structure and melodrama, the film instead follows the slasher mentality of victims being bumped off one by one, with very little in the way of pointless filler material or unnecessary chat. Indeed, it works mainly as a series of long, drawn out death scenes that fit together in a fractured timeline, leaping backwards and forwards in a way which allows the film to take place in a short fifteen minute time span. Siriwiwat and Laoyont manage to pull this off very well, and although chaotic the narrative just about hangs together, even managing to survive a frankly insane (though oddly touching) final twist.

This is not to suggest that Sick Nurses is a sensible or coherent film - far, far from it. From pretty much the first frame it is made clear that logic and realism were way down the directors' list of concerns, and the film is a determinedly surreal affair, coming across like A Nightmare on Elm St on a bad acid trip. The death scenes are incredibly creative and bizarre, with some truly jaw-dropping moments of ghoulish madness and some excellent use of special effects. Also in its favour is the fact the film is fiercely visceral and bloody, with lots of severed limbs, surgical saws and squirm inducing scenes. Of course, given the notorious strictness of the Thai censors there is no real nudity to speak of, though the film has a definite sleazy and perverse streak, with lots of shots of the gorgeous nurses in their underwear and with the camera often lingering on cleavages and other choice parts of their anatomies.

The gore and skin play an important thematic part in the film and are not simply for cheap thrills, with Siriwiwat and Laoyont savagely attacking the vanity and material obsessions of the nurses. All of the characters are unpleasant, and as such the film at times takes on the feel of an off-kilter satire on modern morality. Certainly, although not comical it has a definite streak of cruel humour, with the ghost lurking around as a sardonic presence who in a departure from the usual glum ghouls seems to really get a kick out of her actions and who even manages to crack a mean smile or two.

Siriwiwat and Laoyont's direction is excellent throughout, with a wild use of colour that firmly locates the hospital set in another dimension. Recalling Inferno and other works of the Italian maestro Dario Argento, the lurid greens, pinks and blues provide a constant assault on the senses and generate a distinctly unsettling atmosphere. The film is packed with imaginative camera work that also helps to keep the viewer on edge and trying to work out what next piece of nastiness will be unleashed next. The pace is fast and unrelenting, and clocking in at just an hour and twenty minutes, the film never wastes time or outstays its welcome.

As a result, Sick Nurses is the perfect antidote for tired genre fans, packing in more excitement and far out thrills than a dozen of its erstwhile peers. Hugely entertaining and slickly directed, it will hopefully find its audience on DVD around the world, as well as providing proof that Asian horror still has plenty to offer in the right hands.

by James Mudge - BeyondHollywood.com

This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

Customer Review of "Sick Nurses (DVD) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)"

Average Customer Rating for this Edition: Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10 (1)

numinair
See all my reviews


August 12, 2009

Sexy, gory, leggy, bloody, funny…nurses Customer Review Rated Bad 8 - 8 out of 10
It’s not difficult to see why “Sick Nurses” is the new Asian horror cult movie. Its sexy with leggy stocking clad nurses, fast, funny, gory with decently used horror effects, as a daft but good plot but more than anything keeps to a roller coaster pace from beginning to end. If you like Asia horror, you’ll love this. Tawan a love jealous nurse is stabbed to death by her nurse colleagues for frantically wanting to reveal that their noble doctor Tar is selling illegal dead bodies on a black market (would you trust this lot with even hypodermics?). After Tawan’s murder her body is left in cold storage for seven days in the doc’s car boot. But as the seventh day approaches to midnight, tortuously supernatural horrors begin to happen to each of the other nurses. “Sick Nurses” is mainly told in none linear flashbacks within an alternate ‘looking glass’ hospital playground of horrors, leading up to fuller reasons for Tawan’s murder. After their bad deed, the narcissistic and ‘seven deadly sins’ infected nurses are then individually plagued by a revenging silent banshee, which causes the nurses to have hallucinatory terrors relating to their personal obsessions (materialism et al), gruesomely displayed within the mad dark surreal nightmare representation of the hospital.

For a major part the spookiness is quite farcical, with fetish clothed nurses getting scared in lampooned ways by the vengeful ghost girl (looking like a blend of Sadako trademark eye and long black hair and female X-men Mystique). This ominous blue ghost succeeds in getting the hapless comedy nurses to strangle themselves, get strung up by some rapid hair growth, have blooded teeth cleaning sessions, head butt elevator walls and have their ‘infected’ dark blue limbs suddenly turn against them, to make for some dark but daft satire. But as the film progresses the silly scariness gets more gruesomely bloody (a razor blade mouth mutilation and dismembered limbs in a red bath of blood for instance) as the plot thickens (as well as the blood). Although gory, its still moderate say compared to horrors like “Tokyo Gore Police”. Albeit dating back to 2007, it bought to mind EXTE Hair Extension, Korean horror drama “Coma” (by supernatural time zone bits) and “The Wig” due to a similar outcome (but not the hair bit) and, yes, maybe a little Silent Hill with some hair faced nurses. But a Tai movie well made, making for some great silly, crazy horror satire.
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