Carla Romanelli, an Italian actress active in the 1970s, brings a distinctive flair to the world of cult cinema. In The Sensuous Nurse (1975), she plays the titular character, a nurse navigating the erotic exploits of her patients, embodying the playful and provocative spirit of the era. Her role in Some Like It Cool (1977) further cements her status in the realm of exploitation films, where she showcases her comedic timing and charm. Romanelli's contributions to these films exemplify the vibrant and audacious nature of 1970s genre cinema.
The Sensuous Nurse
As an aging widower begins suffering from heart trouble, his greedy heirs hope to speed him on his way by hiring a seductive nurse (Andress) to get his pulse racing. Their plan eventually backfires as the young beauty begins to fall in love with the old man. An aging widower who owns successful winery, Leonida Bottacin, has a severe heart attack during a sexual liaison with another man's wife. Leonida's relatives hope to inherit the winery to sell it to American business interests. On learning from the physician that a second heart attack will be fatal, Leonida's son-in-law Benito hires his ex-girlfriend Anna, a very attractive nurse, to attend to Leonida. Benito hopes that Leonida will be sufficiently excited by Anna's beauty and sensuality to suffer a deadly heart attack. Despite Benito's plans, Anna takes excellent care of Leonida and eventually falls in love with. Eventually Leonida recovers and marries Anna, crushing the hopes of his relatives for a quick inheritance. To protect her new husband's health, Anna plans for a celibate marriage. However, Leonida insists on having sex on their honeymoon and dies as a result. Anna inherits his assets and uses part of her husband's fortune to provide him with a grand funeral.