Nurse 3D

The film stars Paz de la Huerta, Katrina Bowden, and Corbin Bleu.

Nurse 3D was released in limited theaters by The Film Arcade and by Lionsgate through video on demand on February 7, 2014.

Afterwards, Abby downloads several photos that she had taken from the previous night before leaving to see a psychiatrist, revealed to be Larry.

Confirming that he is unfaithful to Danni's mother, Abby shows up at his place of work one day and convinces him to give her a ride, during which she paralyzes him with vecuronium bromide, resulting in a car accident.

Danni tries to go to the police, only for Detective Rogan to dismiss her claims as evidence of her trying to hurt Abby because the other woman didn't return her affections.

He uses the photographs Abby took as proof to this effect, which Steve sees as a result of Danni summoning him to the police station for support.

[10] In 2015, de la Huerta sued the film's producers for $55 million, claiming that the overdub by another actress (her lawsuit quoted a critic as calling it a "monotone performance") had infringed on her rights and damaged her career.

[13] It was released by The Film Arcade in ten United States theaters on February 7, 2014, and on video on demand by Lionsgate.

[14] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 29 out of 100, based on seven critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.

[15] Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter criticized the direction and script writing, "Director Doug Aarniokoski and co-screenwriter David Loughery fail to infuse the overly familiar elements with the necessary dark humor".

[5] Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times commented "doesn't have any of the wit that a film like this needs to give it campy coolness".

[16] Peter Sobczynski of RogerEbert.com gave the film a positive review rating it two and a half stars writing, "It is ridiculously lurid trash from start to finish and anyone trying to argue otherwise is as crazy as its central character.

"[19] Fearnet's Scott Weinberg also echoed this sentiment, saying that the film was "nothing resembling a deep, intellectual, or insightful horror flick" but that it was "however, quite a bit of good, gruesome fun if you enjoy 'body count' horror combined with a basic but serviceable plot yanked straight out of Single White Female.