[1] Close friends Anne Carr and Helen Todd move into a singles complex where every tenant must be unmarried and under 30.
A couple of neighbors make a wager with bachelor playboy Bret Hendley that he can't seduce Anne successfully.
Mr. Parker, the building's manager, throws an engagement party for Bret and Anne, then proceeds to evict them from the premises.
[3] A contemporary review in The New York Times by film critic Vincent Canby described the film as "a mindless, witless romantic drama about the mindless, witless young people who live, swim and boogoloo all day in one of those southern California apartment houses restricted to chamois-skinned unmarrieds," adding that the movie "is really an impotent fantasy about the sex life of the young [...] only an elderly movie producer living in southern California could remain alive and yet be so dead to the meaning of the world around him.
"[4] In her review for AllMovie, critic Sandra Brennan wrote that the film "is basically about the exploitation [of] two naive young women," one of whom "gains firsthand experience with gang rape and suicide.