Miss Robin Crusoe is a 1953 American low-budget adventure film produced and directed by Eugene Frenke and starring Amanda Blake, George Nader and Rosalind Hayes.
She soon settles in, building herself a tree house, praying to God for protection from the hostile animals, and keeping track of her island life in her diary.
In December, Royal Navy officer Jonathan washes ashore after a storm sinks his ship and kill his crewmates.
Robin's experiences with lecherous sailors and her cruel father have embittered her against men, and she is hostile and suspicious at first.
Just then, a warship appears and bombards the attackers, enabling the trio to steal an outrigger canoe and reach the safety of the ship.
When producer Eugene Franke attempted to register that title with the Motion Picture Registration Bureau, there were objections raised by Óscar Danciger, who had recently completed a film called Robinson Crusoe in Mexico, and M-G-M, which was planning a film to be called "Robinson Crusoe" starring Spencer Tracy.
Bernstein had not been blacklisted, but had been what he referred to as "graylisted", saying "I wasn't one of the big wheels of the Communist Party or anything, but I'd done enough left-wing things that between about 1953 and 1955, the major studios would have been very loath to employ me."
Critic Win Fanning wrote in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: "As it is quite impossible to believe that a number of grown men and women could seriously go about the making of a movie called Miss Robin Crusoe, it must be assumed some sort of joke is intended.