"Adam lost his apple" tells the story of a rich young man who is hired to shoot an advertisement film for the Tourism Office of the Bahamas. When he is about to get some shots of uninhabited islands, he discovers a trio of nudists inhabiting one of them. Quickly, he falls in love with one of the girls and decides to leave his old life behind.
That's it, that's pretty much all there is when it comes to the story. It is only one in a series of movies depicting the lifestyle of nudism around that time, trying to reduce skepticism towards the unknown trend. However, while most of those movies tend to display nudist camps of some form, this title goes way beyond that by making some kind of Robinson Crusoe out of them. Unsurprisingly, the girl inhabiting the island looks like she just stepped out of a beauty salon and the attractive young hero seems to easily forget about his girlfriend at home.
All in all there are plenty reasons that make this movie feel somewhat odd. The story is both boring and unrealistic, as all of these films it is a nudist film that is afraid to depict nudity, which is a paradox in itself and there is even less message in this film than in comparable titles, because the plot is so implausible.
That's it, that's pretty much all there is when it comes to the story. It is only one in a series of movies depicting the lifestyle of nudism around that time, trying to reduce skepticism towards the unknown trend. However, while most of those movies tend to display nudist camps of some form, this title goes way beyond that by making some kind of Robinson Crusoe out of them. Unsurprisingly, the girl inhabiting the island looks like she just stepped out of a beauty salon and the attractive young hero seems to easily forget about his girlfriend at home.
All in all there are plenty reasons that make this movie feel somewhat odd. The story is both boring and unrealistic, as all of these films it is a nudist film that is afraid to depict nudity, which is a paradox in itself and there is even less message in this film than in comparable titles, because the plot is so implausible.