By Patrick Cremona

Published: Wednesday, 26 October 2022 at 12:00 am


Krysty Wilson-Cairns already has some very impressive screenwriting credits to her name – including Last Night in Soho and 1917 – and her latest film The Good Nurse is another triumph.

The film is directed by Tobias Lindholm and tells the chilling true story of how nurse Charles Cullen (Eddie Redmayne) murdered a huge number of patients while working at various hospitals across New Jersey – before he was eventually found out by his colleague and friend Amy Loughren (Jessica Chastain).

Wilson-Cairns was working on the script for a number of years before the film was made, adapting it from the non-fiction book of the same name by Charles Graeber, and naturally, she was unable to fit every aspect of the case into the screenplay.

“I mean, there was so much,” she told RadioTimes.com when asked which parts of Graeber’s book had to be left out.

“You know, we were telling the story from Amy’s point of view, so we never really could go out with it – but the way in which Charles Cullen was passed from hospital to hospital, the way in which he was dismissed for stealing supplies like toilet paper, or he was dismissed for putting the wrong dates on his application form.

“And every single one of these hospitals – or at least, the people within these hospitals – strongly suspected that he was murdering patients, and not just one or two, murdering multiple patients. And I just think that to me is such a failing of everything – of humanity, of the system, of law enforcement procedures.

“And that was so galling. And, you know, there are obviously parts of that in there, but we couldn’t put that in.”