The Weekend Nun (TV Movie 1972) Poster

(1972 TV Movie)

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3/10
What sounds like a dopey premise is apparently based on a REAL story!
planktonrules8 March 2017
Sister Damian (Joanna Pettet) has a calling in addition to her life as a nun. She feels the need to work with disadvantaged people through the probation office and is about to start a job working there as Marjorie Walker--with only her boss knowing she's a nun. Despite sounding like a really dumb premise, this is apparently based on a true story, that of Joyce Duco! However, I strongly doubt that Duco was this naive and this dopey when it came to her probationers. The problem is EVERYTHING her probationers tell her, this lady instantly believes...with wide-eyed innocence. This Mary Poppins sort of attitude really makes no sense. Yes, a nun might be much more likely to look into the good in people...but to be THIS naive?! I strongly doubt that...especially since someone like this would be almost completely useless as a probation officer. In other words, the writing was highly unrealistic and tended to portray Marjorie more as an annoying caricature than someone who really works with probationers. I was a social worker and worked a lot with the probation department...and someone like Marjorie would have lasted about 10 minutes on the job! Highly unrealistic and even cartoonish at times. I would love to see a new version...one that sticks closer to Duco's life and respects the audience's intelligence.

According to "The ABC Movie of the Week Companion", this film was actually the pilot for a potential TV series. I can clearly understand why the series was never made!!
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5/10
Nun in the closet.
mark.waltz28 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The character played by Joanna Pettet in this film is a nun by career but keeps that a secret when she works as a parole officer helping young girls. One of them strikes her interest as she goes out of her way to help her deal with various problems, including drug addiction and prostitution, and that puts her at odds with her convent. Pettet seems far too young for her role as she is barely older than her clients, quite attractive when wearing lay clothes, and it's obvious that she's conflicted whether or not she wants to stay in the order especially as her problems on the outside increase which includes interest by the men she meets who have no idea that she's given her life to God.

A noble TV movie of the week, there are good performances in supporting roles by Vic Morrow, James Gregory, Anne Sothern and Beverly Garland, but the movie never seems to have a clear direction in which it is going. Being well meaning doesn't always work, and I never really felt engaged or convinced with what was going on. Look for "Happy Days" mom, Marian Ross in a small part, with Tina Andrews as the pretty young black girl seen briefly as Pettet's first client. Kay Lenz as the troubled drug addict and occasional prostitute failed to draw me in though, being the weak element in the film.
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