[1] It was directed by Ken Dixon and stars Elizabeth Kaitan, Cindy Beal, Brinke Stevens, Don Scribner, and Carl Horner.
Daria and Tisa, two nubile female prisoners, clad only in rough-cut 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 Zed, a man with a scarred face who lives in a large fortress.
Once Zed leaves, the pretend sex becomes real lovemaking, and the two lie in bed talking about having found purpose and contentment.
Zed, dying from his injuries, initiates a self-destruct of his fortress but Daria and Tisa escape in time, and decide to explore the universe.
The film was given a limited release theatrically in the United States by the Charles Band funded Urban Classics in September 1987.
[3] The movie is a mix of action, drama, and comedy, and features partial female nudity, restraint, simulated sex, and mild violence.
Slave Girls from Beyond Infinity was specifically criticized on the floor of the United States Senate by Jesse Helms (R-North Carolina) in 1992.