Impulse (1974 film)

Impulse is a 1974 American horror thriller film, starring William Shatner as a serial killer of wealthy widows. Ruth Roman, Kim Nicholas, Jennifer Bishop and Harold Sakata co-star. It was written by Tony Crechales and directed by William Grefé.

Impulse
Theatrical release poster
Directed byWilliam Grefé
Written byTony Crechales
Produced bySocrates Ballis
StarringWilliam Shatner
Ruth Roman
Harold Sakata
Jennifer Bishop
James Dobson
Kim Nicholas
CinematographyJulio Chavez
Edited byEdwin Gibson
Release date
  • January 31, 1974 (1974-01-31)
Running time
82 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$4 million

The film was first released in Tampa, Florida, on January 31, 1974, where the filming took place.[2] It was subsequently released nationwide in 1974–75, making nearly $4 million in the domestic box office.[3][4][5]

Plot

Playboy con-man Matt Stone (Shatner, in some outrageous 70s fashions) has a history of bilking women out of their money, then killing them and moving on to find his next wealthy victim. (In a typical example of B-movie psychology, he became a homicidal maniac as a child after killing his mom’s abusive boyfriend in self-defense). Matt thinks he’s spotted the perfect target for his next deadly scam, the alluring single mom Ann Moy (Jennifer Bishop), but Moy’s adolescent daughter Tina sees through the grifter and tries to warn her mother to steer clear. Complications occur when Matt gets a visit from his old prison cellmate, a wrestler known as “Karate Pete” (none other than Harold "Odd-Job" Sakata of Goldfinger fame). Pete wants to cut in on Matt’s action, with his instant power over Matt suggesting the two had a dominant/submissive relationship in the slammer. Matt gathers the courage to kill Pete, a murder that’s witnessed by Tina. She tells her mom, who thinks Tina is just making up lies about Matt and accuses her of being a selfish brat trying to ruin her mom’s happiness. But the more Ann’s older friend Julia (Hollywood veteran Ruth Roman) gets to know Matt, the more she’s convinced that young Tina is right about him, with her suspicions putting her on Matt’s ever-growing list for elimination. In the final violent showdown in Julia’s palatial home, Matt will get what’s coming to him, Ann will realize what a monster he was, and Tina will have the last laugh.

Cast

Production

The working title for the film was Want a Ride, Little Girl? According to the Examiner.com interview, director Grefé cast actors who were located in Miami at the time. He met Shatner at the airport, Bishop was Grefé's friend, and Sakata had a wrestling career there apart from appearing in the James Bond film Goldfinger.

Filming lasted 15 days, including 12 with Shatner and final three with other actors.[1] During one take of the scene where Shatner's character hangs Sakata's character to death, Sakata nearly died of being accidentally hanged by tight rope. Fortunately, with Sakata's "superior neck development", the crew was able to save his life.[1][6] Shatner broke his finger during the incident while supporting Sakata's weight.

Legacy

The band Prolapse sampled the line of dialogue "I want you to meet someone. Tina this is- this is Matthew Stone" in their song "Tina This is Matthew Stone" which is the closing track of their debut album Pointless Walks to Dismal Places.

See also

References

  1. William Grefé (November 15, 2010). "Shatner Is a Ladykiller: Director William Grefé on Impulse (1974)". Examiner.com (Interview).
  2. Wright, Fred (January 3, 1974). "Tampa Film to Premiere". St. Petersburg Independent. p. 3-B.
  3. "Weekend Update: At the movies". The Miami News. January 15, 1982. p. 1-D.
  4. Word, Rob (January 11, 1976). "Focus on Entertainment: New movie Weed stars Dan Pastorini". The Ledger. p. 4 from "TV and Radio Week".
  5. "It's Happening Today — Movies". St. Petersburg Times. February 16, 1974. p. 5-D.
  6. "Impulse co-star will be here Wednesday". Post Daily News. Kingsport, Tennessee. July 30, 1974. p. 4.


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