The film's trailer contains the original deleted CGI effects and a rejected musical score from Full Moon's Arcade.
Features Brandy Davis's first softcore sex scenes. She told Femme Fatales magazine, "I don't mind nudity but the love scene I do is the most racy thing I've ever done. It's not hardcore so it's nothing to be ashamed of, but my parents won't know about it and my boyfriend doesn't want to hear about it."
When a writer for Femme Fatales magazine arrived on set to do an article and interviews about the production, producer Pat Siciliano said they needed men to caress an actress's nude body in a close up for a dream sequence. Siciliano said he was going to be one, calling it a "perk" of his position, and asked the writer if he wanted to do it too. The writer declined.
When asked how he chose women for this and other erotic films, producer Pat Siciliano said, "She has to be appealing to my eye and when she comes to set, she has to rock." He added that they of course need to be uninhibited and have no qualms about being fully nude and acting out softcore sex scenes. During auditions, he'll have them strip and act out a scene. He pointed out that a majority of the women he casts for his films are specialists who aren't hired for their acting ability. The principle actors have some excursions into the erotic world but its the specialists that do the grinding dances and "fun stuff" because they're the ones that do it best. Most are erotic dancers. They'll do the movies because it helps promote their appearances at strip clubs.
When asked why his erotic films cast mostly white women, producer Pat Siciliano said because there aren't that many "ethnic types" in the erotic film business. He said they're trying to get more ethnics into their films but there just aren't enough willing or available. They invited a black stripper named Baroka to appear in this film but she went to a convention in Vegas instead because she'd earn a lot more money dancing there.