There’s a great pulp idea
at the heart of The Ultimate Thrill,
although the potential of the idea is almost completely neutralized by bad
writing, one-dimensional acting, and tedious skiing scenes. Patient B-movie
fans might enjoy trudging through the boring bits in order to reach the
sensationalistic high points, but even those viewers are sure to be
underwhelmed. Suffice to say, the title of this picture promises much more than
the movie actually delivers, even though the title refers to the kick that the
story’s villain gets out of killing people. And that’s where the great pulp
idea comes into play—the villain, a super-wealthy businessman, uses his
beautiful wife to lure unsuspecting young men to his ski chalet, and then he
hunts them down and murders them, using the pretense of being an aggrieved
husband as his justification. Chances are the story would have worked in an
erotic-thriller sort of way had the filmmakers added in one more element—the
bad guy getting a psychosexual charge by actually watching young men sleep with
his wife. However, The Ultimate Thrill
is so ineptly written and directed that expecting the film to provide a fully
rendered narrative concept is unreasonable. At most, this picture offers a kinky
premise, some attractive shots of snow-covered mountains, and a few
surprisingly nasty instances of violence.
Set in the posh resort town of Vale,
Colorado, The Ultimate Thrill
concerns Roland (Eric Braeden), a powerful and wealthy stud with a porn
moustache and a private helicopter. Roland’s long-suffering wife is blonde
hottie Michele (Britt Ekland). In the first act of the movie, Roland abandons
Michele long enough for wannabe seducer Tom (Michael Blodgett) to make the
scene. Then Roland returns and boots Tom from his house, telling the young man
to flee on skis. Roland follows in his helicopter, leading to the gory but
silly scene of Tom skiing off a cliff—and smashing face-first into the
passenger-side window of the helicopter, leaving a mess of blood and viscera in
his wake. Roland finishes Tom off in somewhat spectacular fashion. The
remainder of the movie concerns Michele’s entanglement with a writer, Joe
(Barry Brown), and the inevitable showdown between Joe and Roland. At one
point, a hang-glider becomes involved. Directed by the prolific Emmy winner
Robert Butler, who spent most of his journeyman career in episodic TV, The Ultimate Thrill is competent in
terms of visuals, but anemic from the perspective of character and story. The
dialogue is trite, many scenes feel padded, and the performances are robotic. Worse,
the picture includes the ugly cliché of a female character submitting to rape
because she interprets the assault as an act of misguided passion. Yuck.
The Ultimate Thrill: FUNKY
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