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The Carey Treatment is a 1972 American crime thriller film directed by Blake Edwards and starring James Coburn, Jennifer O'Neill, Dan O'Herlihy and Pat Hingle. The film was based on the 1968 novel A Case of Need credited to Jeffery Hudson, a pseudonym for Michael Crichton.
- William Belasco
- Roy Budd
- Geoffrey Productions
Jul 2, 1972 · With James Coburn, Jennifer O'Neill, Pat Hingle, Skye Aubrey. At a Boston hospital, a new surgeon, Dr. Carey, becomes an amateur sleuth to help clear a colleague's name who's been accused of botching an illegal abortion that killed a 15 year old girl; the daughter of the chief surgeon.
- (1.6K)
- Crime, Mystery, Thriller
- Blake Edwards
- 1972-07-02
The sad thing is that the movie’s hopefully a thriller. It’s one of your slices-of-life dramas about everyday events in a large metropolitan hospital. The hospital administrator’s daughter has died after an unnecessary abortion, and renegade physician Coburn dedicates himself to saving the reputation of the brilliant young Chinese surgeon ...
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List. Dr. Peter Carey (James Coburn) moves to Boston, where he becomes a pathologist at a prominent hospital and gets involved with Georgia Hightower (Jennifer O'Neill). Soon the teenage daughter...
- (7)
- Blake Edwards
- PG
- James Coburn
Summaries. At a Boston hospital, a new surgeon, Dr. Carey, becomes an amateur sleuth to help clear a colleague's name who's been accused of botching an illegal abortion that killed a 15 year old girl; the daughter of the chief surgeon. Dr. Peter Carey is a pathologist at a Boston hospital.
Synopsis. When California pathologist Peter Carey accepts new position at a conservative Boston hospital, he is reunited with his old colleague David Tao, an Asian-American doctor. After staff introductions on his first day, Carey invites attractive dietician Georgia Hightower to join him and David for dinner.
Michael Crichton. Novel. John D.F. Black. Screenplay. Harriet Frank Jr. Screenplay. Irving Ravetch. Screenplay. A doctor uncovers a hotbed of corruption when he tries to clear a colleague of a murder charge.