Slave Girls from Beyond Infinity

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Slave Girls from Beyond Infinity
Directed by Ken Dixon
Produced by Don Daniel
Written by Ken Dixon
Starring Elizabeth Kaitan
Cindy Beal
Brinke Stevens
Don Scribner
Carl Horner
Release date(s) 1987
Running time 80 min
Country Flag of the United States USA
Language English
IMDb profile

Slave Girls from Beyond Infinity is a 1987 direct-to-video film that transports “The Most Dangerous Game” to an alien world and populates it with bikini-clad space prison escapees and weird space monsters.

[edit] Plot

Daria and Tisa, two nubile female prisoners, clad only in skimpy rabbit skin bikinis, break out of their cell in a space gulag, overpower their guards, and escape in a shuttlecraft.

The ship mysteriously malfunctions and the girls crash land on a nearby habitable world where they become the guests of a man in tight leather pants named Zed. He and his robots are the world’s sole sentient inhabitants.

At dinner, our girls meet two other crash survivors who are also Zed’s guests, Rik and his sister Shala. They warn the girls that something’s not right about Zed and that members of their party have already disappeared.

A late night visit to Zed’s secret trophy room reveals all. The walls are lined with the heads of dozens of Zed’s previous guests whom he hunted for sport.

The escapees and their new friends join forces to survive the hunt, defeat Zed, and escape the planet.

[edit] Cast

  • Elizabeth Kaitan as Daria, a space prison escapee
  • Cindy Beal as Tisa. A space prison escapee
  • Don Scribner as Zed, a hunter
  • Brinke Stevens as Shala, a castaway
  • Carl Horner as Rik, a castaway
  • Kirk Graves as Vak, a robot
  • Randoph Roehbling as Krel, a robot
  • Fred Tate as Alien Mutant, a hunchbacked alien with a laser rifle for an arm

[edit] Controversy

Slave Girls from Beyond Infinity was specifically criticized on the floor of the U.S. Senate by Jesse Helms (R-North Carolina) in 1992.

Senator Helms cited a case in which some of his constituents had accidentally stumbled onto the movie while flipping through cable channels as justification for amendments to the Cable Act of 1992. Helms wanted to force cable operators to block “indecent” programming unless customers specifically asked for it in writing.

The amendment was struck down by a U.S, Federal Court in 1993 and the decision was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1996.