The Uranus Experiment
Private captures on camera the very first orgasm in zero gravity! Lifting the genre to historic new heights! Two spacecraft - one American, the other Russian are launched simultaneously. Both believe they are on a common mission: to dock and travel together through space. Their ultimate desination is the seventh planet from the sun, Uranus. With an entire galaxy as their laboratory, the largely female Russian team's secret mission is to learn how the absence of gravity affects human sexuality: male sperm production and female reaction. Before reaching Uranus, an explosive zero-gravity orgy launches bodies and love juices to float gracefully around the space capsule. The historic sex scenes were shot in a special aircraft, flying into an altitude of 35,000 feet, then diving quickly and turning upward again. Precisely the technique used in APOLLO 13. Zero gravity is achieved for about 25-30 seconds and is repeated a couple of times in order to capture all the adventurous action.
- Overview
- Cast
- Crew
- Recommendations
The Uranus Experiment
- Overview
- Cast
- Crew
- Recommendations
Status
Released
Release Date
Jun 29, 1999
Runtime
2h 31m
Genres
Science Fiction
User Score
85%
Original Title
The Uranus Experiment
Production Companies
Private
Director
John Millerman
Budget
$750,000
Description
Private captures on camera the very first orgasm in zero gravity! Lifting the genre to historic new heights! Two spacecraft - one American, the other Russian are launched simultaneously. Both believe they are on a common mission: to dock and travel together through space. Their ultimate desination is the seventh planet from the sun, Uranus. With an entire galaxy as their laboratory, the largely female Russian team's secret mission is to learn how the absence of gravity affects human sexuality: male sperm production and female reaction. Before reaching Uranus, an explosive zero-gravity orgy launches bodies and love juices to float gracefully around the space capsule. The historic sex scenes were shot in a special aircraft, flying into an altitude of 35,000 feet, then diving quickly and turning upward again. Precisely the technique used in APOLLO 13. Zero gravity is achieved for about 25-30 seconds and is repeated a couple of times in order to capture all the adventurous action.