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When on a hunting trip one day Arhtur Sherwood (Norman Casserly),
editor of the Evening Times, discovers a nudist camp, he decides to run
a sensationalist exposé about it in his paper, uncovering the whole
dirty secrets of these nudists. So he sends his star girl reporter Stacy
(Davee Decker) undercover to the camp. But though the girl was first
reluctant to even go their, she soon enjoys the nudist lifestyle - which
is also mirrored in her articles. Furious about how things have turned
out other than he wnated, Arthur tries to talk Stacy into turning her
articles into a more negative direction, and, as she - by now a
convinced naturist - refuses, fires her. To get his article the way he
wants it, he then decides to go to the camp undercover himself, much to
the dismay of Stacy, who has decided to spend her newfound freedom here,
in the nude. Only when she discovers that Arthur has been won over to
the nude side of the power during his stay in the camp & now runs a
series of articles in favour of the nudists is she able to forgive him
& they confess their love for each other. Zelda R.Suplee plays the
director of the camp, a job she also had in real life. As
nudist films go, their plots are just a thin framework for showing nude
people - more often than not in surreal poses, since back then it was
not allowed to show primary genitalia - doing what nude people do,
mostly sitting around chatting, sitting by the pool smiling in the
camera (legs crossed all the time, of course), going from the camera
(which means we are treated to a lot of backs & asses) or playing
volleyball with the team facing the camera inexplicably wearing trunks,
while the soundtrack is filled with a monologue of a woman explaining of
how she came to enjoy the nudist lifestyle. From today's standpoint -
being used to much more open-minded sexploitation - these movies tend to
ber dull, of course. Somehow at the same time they tend to hold a
strange, otherworldly fascination. |