Box office The film was a success at the box office recouping its cost in a matter of weeks; it inspired a number of similar films set in
nudist camps.
Critical The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The story, dialogue and performances are as inept as in most nudist productions, but
Nudist Paradise, proudly introduced as the first British film on the subject, is at least in better physical condition than the pre-war productions we have recently seen. The sole attractions of Spielplatz appear to be a pool, a badminton court and a trampoline, each shown at exhausting length. The story is told in flashback by a woman interviewer and also by an off-screen male commentator, who at one point interviews a character in the film. Other surprises include a Miss Venus contest in which half-a-dozen girls each go through the same six poses – ranging from "Sports Girl" to "Psyche at the Bath" – one after the other; and a camp fire sing-song in which a single harmonica on the screen becomes a guitar band with a rock 'n' roll style choir on the sound track. The editing, even for this kind of film, is remarkably incompetent; and the lingering undressing and bedroom scenes and the dialogue's doubles entendres, not all of which can be entirely accidental, make the film's motives rather suspect."
Variety wrote: "There's nothing objectionable about
Nudist Paradise. It is just trite, and rather stupid. ... it is simply a piece of unwieldy propaganda for naturism, which will appeal only to sun-worshippers and the curious, but which has obvious angles of exploitation. ...
Helen Wiggins' editing is erratic and, in juxtaposition to some stilted dialog, occasionally raises unintended yocks."
Sight and Sound wrote: "Romance in the raw, and as tedious in its moments of deliberate salacity as it is awesomely incompetent in its making. British, and apparently proud of it." In ''The British 'B' Film
, Chibnall and McFarlane wrote that in 1959–1960 "the fledgling British cinema of exploitation was beginning to flap its wings, encouraged by liberal classifications from the BBFC, which gave ‘A’ certificates to ‘naturist’ films including Nudist Paradise'' ... filmed extravagantly in
Eastman Color and 'Nudiscope' with an on-screen endorsement from the
Duke of Bedford." ==References==