Critical response Monthly Film Bulletin said: "The story is sheer melodrama, running the weird gamut of anti-nuclear demonstration, striptease, pre-marital intercourse, rape and improper use of the telephone – scarcely a digestible mixture."
Sight and Sound wrote (2010): "On the one hand, the film portrays a society in which the old certainties about class, sexuality and politics are being questioned. In its more louche moments, it is even reminiscent of
Val Guest's later 1970s softcore romp
Au Pair Girls in its portrayal of Eva, the uninhibited and promiscuous foreigner who so excites the buttoned-up Brits. ... Despite its inadvertently comic moments and moralising tone, the film is well enough crafted and acted to seem like more than just a piece of heavyhanded public-health propaganda." In
Transformation and Tradition in 1960s British Cinema (2019) Laura Mayne writes: "Significantly, [the film] also featured the German Margaret Rose Keil, whose deviant actions were therefore easier to pass the censor because she was considered 'exotic'. ... In
That Kind of Girl the desire to inform as well as educate is a key feature of the film's highly moralistic 'it could happen to you' narrative."
Home media That Kind of Girl was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the UK on the
BFI's Flipside imprint on 25 January 2009. The disc also includes a selection of short films and an interview with Robert Hartford-Davis (1968, 14 mins) in which he discusses his film career and production methods. ==References==