I'm not necessarily big on point and shoots, but for anyone who knows a bit about film photography, they would know that there's a few gold nuggets in the wide expanse of shitty Haminex and rebranded Vivitar compacts. Machines like the Contax G2 and Nikon 35Ti spring to mind, but there are some decent point and shoots that don't require you to remortgage your house. One of those is the Nikon L35AF.
The Nikon L35AF was Nikon's first autofocus point and shoot 35mm camera, released in 1983. Designed by Giorgetto Giugiaro, it features a 35mm f/2.8 lens, timer function, built in pop up flash and all in a somewhat compact case. It'll fit in the pocket of your big warm winter jacket, but forget sticking this into the front of your stretch Levis. Nikon made one further enhancement to the L35AF, increasing its maximum ISO capability from a paltry 400 to a respectable 1000, and also released a similar model that can imprint a date on the photo — the L35AD. Unfortunately, subsequent models of autofocus Nikon point and shoots were either stripped back in features, stripped back in supplied lens capability, or stripped back in build quality. The R&D Nikon undertook at the time must've took its toll on the accounting department, and perhaps the bean-counters started moving in and cut back whatever they can to recuperate costs.