Saturday, November 1, 2025

SLAVE GIRLS FROM BEYOND INFINITY (1987) Full Moon Blu-ray Review + Screenshots

SLAVE GIRLS FROM BEYOND INFINITY (1987)

Label: Full Moon Entertainment
Region Code: Region-Free
Duration: 74 Minutes
Rating: R
Audio: English Dolby Digital 2.0 and 5.1 Surround 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1)
Director: Ken Dixon
Cast: Elizabeth Kaitan, Cindy Beal, Brinke Stevens, Don Scribner, Carl Horner

Cheese-tastic sci-fi adventure film Slave Girls From Beyond Infinity (1987) is a fun bit of light-hearted space-fluff courtesy of director Ken Dixon (The Erotic Adventures of Robinson Crusoe), a real tongue in cheek space-romp custom made for love of b-movies. The film stars 80's blond-babes Elizabeth Kaitan (Friday the 13th VII) and Cindy Beal (My Chauffeur) as Daria and Tisa, both inmates on an intergalactic prison-ship. Together they manage to free themselves from what looks to be very medieval imprisonment, chained to the floor, and hot-wire a space craft, only to crash land on a nearby uncharted jungle planet.

Surviving the crash the ladies - wearing bikinis naturally - arrive at a castle owned by aristocrat Zed (Don Scribner, The Cooler) who lives there with a pair of whirring androids who do his bidding. The seemingly generous host clothes them and introduces them to another shipwrecked couple who recently landed on the planet, siblings Shayla (Brinke Stevens, Sorority Babes in The Slimeball Bowl-A-Rama) and Rik (Carl Horner). The latter of whom lets on that their host is not as kind and benevolent as he first appears.

The rest of the film is pretty much a b-movie space-riff on the Richard Connell novel "The Most Dangerous Game" with Zed hunting each of his stranded guests through the jungle terrain outside of his castle. It's fun stuff, the film is very tongue-in-cheek and silly, it's not trying to do anything overly dramatic or serious, just having exploitative fun with tried and true premise, and being sure to show off plenty of T&A courtesy of starlets Elizabeth Kaitan, Cindy Beal and Brinke Stevens, who went not nude are strangely clad in rough-cut lambskin loins cloths or skimpy lingerie.

There's some fun sets throughout, the spaceships early on are cheesy, the jungle sets are fun, plus we get a couple of cool matte paintings that add production value. The castle fortress is realized rather well all things considered, they did a lot on what was surely a tiny budget. All three women deliver their unnatural sounding lines of dialogue woodenly, but this stilted delivery is pitch perfect for this bikini-clad b-movie. Don Scribner gets to chew the scenery a bit more with an overly-dramatic and campy reading as the baddie here, also tone perfect for this sort of film.

The special effects while not great are surprisingly good, while there's no real bloodshed or gore, we do get some cool-looking androids, a vagina-mouthed alien and a pair of zombies that show up seemingly out of nowhere just for fun, these coming courtesy of John Carl Buechler (From Beyond) and Joe Reader (Cabin Fever 2: Spring Fever).

Audio/Video:
Slave Girls From Beyond Infinity arrives on Blu-ray from Full Moon Features in 1080p HD framed in 1.78:1 widescreen. This is the same transfer as the 2019 Blu-ray from Full Moon, grain is present if a bit uneven in places, colors are solid and blacks are much improved over the previous DVD version I've had for some time. It doesn't look like this is derived from the OCN, most likely a theatrical print in great shape or an interpositive. I thought it looked very good with decent clarity throughout, though we do get a a bit of dirt and debris in places, particularly in the optical effects shots, but overall this is a pleasing HD upgrade for this title.

Sadly we are only give lossy English Dolby Digital 2.0 & 5.1 mixes, c'mon Full Moon, you need to commit to offering lossless audio on your Blu-rays, it's been ten years after the launch of the format! That said the lossy audio delivers the trite dialogue and effects well, clean and without hiss or distortion. The score from Carl Dante (Cellar Dweller) sounds decent too, adding atmosphere to the proceedings without really drawing attention to itself.

Extras on this one are slim, we get a 2-min Trailer for the film plus a 6-min clip Tribute to bombshell star Elizabeth Kaitan by the Exotic Movie House. The single-disc release comes housed in a standard Blu-ray keepcase with a one-sided sleeve of artwork featuring the original movie poster, it's very cool-looking and is fairly accurate except for those one-eyed androids that aren't in the film. A commentary would have been appreciated for this one, the film garnered some notoriety in the early 90's after drawing the ire of North Carolina Sen. Jesse Helms who attributed the delinquency of minors to having access to this sort of trash on late-night cable TV.

Special Features:

- Trailer (1 min)
- Elizabeth Kaitan Tribute (6 min)
- Full Moon Trailers: Subspecies 2 (2 min), Subspecies 3 (1 min), Castle Freak (2 min), Puppet Master III (2 min), Vampire Journals (2 min), Dark Angel (1 min), Trancers 2 (3 min), Spectres (2 min)

Slave Girls From Beyond Infinity (1987) is a fun bit of sci-fi adventure that should appeal to anyone with cheese-loving tastes that range from Malibu Express (1985) to Sorority Babes in the Slimeball Bowl-A-Rama (1987), highly recommended for fans of b-movie fromage and 80's babes.

Screenshots from the Full Moon Blu-ray: 


























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ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS: THE LEGACY COLLECTION (1955-1962) Universal Pictures DVD Review


ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS: THE LEGACY COLLECTION (1955-1962) 34-Disc DVD Set 

Label: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment 
Region Code: A
Rating; Unrated 
Duration: 6947 Minutes 
Audio: English Dolby Digital 
Video: 420p SD Fullscreen (1.33:1) 
Directors: Robert Stevens, Paul Henreid,  Herschel Daugherty, Norman Lloyd, Alfred Hitchcock, Arthur Hiller, James Neilson, Justus Addiss, John Brahm, Robert Altman,  Ida Lupino, Stuart Rosenberg, Robert Stevenson, David Swift, William Friedkin
Cast: Robert Redford, Clint Eastwood, Steve McQueen, Joan Fontaine, Claude Rains, Walter Matthau, Thelma Ritter, Joseph Cotton, Peter Falk, Teresa Wright, Leslie Nielsen

Alfred Hitchcock Presents: The Legacy Collection DVD set from Universal collects 263 episodes of the Master of Suspense Alfred Hitchcock's anthology series that originally from 
1955-1962. I caught these on re-run on TV back in '80s as a kid well before I knew Hitchcock was the director of film ike Psycho and Vertigo. I don't even think as a young kid I was particularly into mystery and suspense outside of Scooby Do Where Are You?, but I was drawn in by that "Funeral March of the Marionette" theme song,  that line-drawing caricature of Hitchcock's figure, and those quirky, deadpan "Good evening..." introductions starring Hitchcock. The series featured loads of contemporary and future Hollywood stars including Robert Redford, Clint Eastwood, Steve McQueen, Claude Rains, Walter Matthau, Thelma Ritter, Joseph Cotton, Peter Falk, and Leslie Nielsen, and included some future directing superstars as well, among them Robert Altman (Nashville), Ida Lupino (The Hitch-Hiker) and William Friedkin (The Exorcist), with Hitchcock himself directing over a dozen episodes of the series, including the series opener "Revenge" with Ralph Meeker (Without Warning) and Vera Miles (Psycho). Favorites of mine include 
"And So Died Riabouchinska", a creepy psychological thriller starring Claide Rains (The Invisible Man) as a man obsessed with a ventriloquist dummy, which was based on a Ray Bradbury short story, or "The Man from the South" starring screen icon Steve McQueen and Peter Lorre from a story by Roald Dahl, a dark gambler tale that is probably best knows these days because it was adapted by Quentin Tarantino for his segment from Four Rooms. Another nailbiter is the "Bang!, You're Dead" wherein in a young kid who dreams of being a cowboy gets his hands on real gun and runs around town, we as viewers know it's real while no one else does, we are just waiting for what seems inevitable to finally happen, and its a terrific sluice of suspense. I'd me remiss not to mention the seasonal seven final episode written by  Robert Bloch (Psycho), about a magician and his sawing a woman in half trick going horribly wrong, which as a kid I found terrifying, apparently it was never actually aired on TV as the censors also found it too disturbing for TV, but it ended up airing in syndication nonetheless. Another banger of a thriller is "The Glass Eye" starring Jessica Tandy (Driving Miss Daisy), as a woman who becomes infatuated with a ventriloquist, the episode is problematic it's agist and ableist, but that was common for the era and it still packs a punch.  

Just as a fan of '50-70s television and film the star-spotting entertainment value found here is top-tier, familiar faces pop-up by way of Vic Morrow (Twilight Zone: The Movie), William Shatner (Star Trek), E.G. Marshall (Creepshow), Jack Klugman (Quincy M.D.), Vincent Price (The House on Haunted Hill), Cloris Leachman (Young Frankenstein), Pat Hingle (Batman), Joseph Cotten (Lady Frankenstein), Denholm Elliot (Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom), Keenan Wynn (Piranha), James Coburn (In Like Flint), Walter Matthau (Charley Varrick), Scatman Crothers (The Shining), Dick York and  Elizabeth Montgomery from Bewitched, Clu Gulager (The Return of the Living Dead), James Franciscus (Tenebrae), Dick Van Dyke (Chitty Chitty Bang Bang), Harry Dean Stanton (Repo Man), Stella Stevens (The Manitou), Robert Loggia (Innocent Blood), Burt Reynolds (Boogie Nights), Robert Alda (M*A*S*H), Fay Wary (King Kong) and so many more! 

Notably this is not a complete series set, there are five episodes that have not been cleared for release due to right issues, including "Lamb to the Slaughter" which was directed by Hitchcock that was based on a short story by Roald Dahl (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory). I don't know all the details, but there five episodes that have never been released on DVD to this day because of licensing issues. It does also not contain the follow-up series The Alfred Hitchcock Hour which ran from '62-65. 

This 34-disc set arrives in a side-loading slipbox, inside are seven individual keepcases housing each season, there are no stacked discs, which is awesome, with each disc on it's own dedicated hub on a flipper tray, each season featuring 36-390 episodes spread across 4-6 DVD discs. The reverse side of the wrap feature an episode guide, which I appreciated. 

How's it look? Exactly like the previous DVD editions, these have not been remastered, though I know these were shot n film and hold out hope that it will one day soon get the proper restorations for an HD release with all of the episodes included, but for now, I love having these all on one set! 

Special Features: 
- Alfred Hitchcock Presents: A Look Back
- Fasten Your Seatbelt: The Thrilling Art of Alfred Hitchcock

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