Jack Colson (Sabato Jr.) is a hardworking guy with a precocious young daughter named Alice (Sternbaum). Luckily for Jack, his sister Teresa (Kramer) is the owner of a local amusement park. However, when there is an offer to buy the park, a mysterious evildoer (don't worry, no spoilers here) starts causing havoc there. At first it's just a few rides malfunctioning - seemingly by accident - but then the baddie graduates to a bomb on the rollercoaster. The rollercoaster is named Thrill, by the way. Inevitably, it's up to Jack to save the park, save his daughter, and even find time for love with the fortune teller, Ann (Harnos). Will saving the amusement park be the ultimate THRILL? Stand by for the thrilling conclusion...It's terror on the log floom as fan favorite Antonio Sabato Jr. snaps into action in this made-for-TV "thriller", originally aired on NBC. While the obvious play here for the filmmakers was to ape Speed (1994) - except make it a rollercoaster instead of a bus - and cross-pollinate that with Beverly Hills Cop III (1994), strangely, they really only opted for the former, and even then it's only the climax of the movie. No terrorists take over the park, and there are no amusement park goons for Sabato to fight. It's mainly just tourists wearing fanny packs and brightly-colored shirts walking around the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk. It's not really a "whodunit", because we very swiftly know who "dunnit" too early on. It's mainly about a Fred Dryer-less Stepfanie Kramer sorting out the park's financial matters while Sabato takes care of his daughter and forges a relationship with the fortune teller. Occasionally he intercedes to help people off a runaway floom, but Thrill really is a textbook study in lost potential. Really, think about all the ways Sabato could outsmart baddies and kill them in an amusement park. The possibilities are endless. Yet that's not the route they decided to go here. We realize it's a TV movie but they still could have done it that way. Part of the fact that the amusement park is a family business is that Jack lets his daughter - who is a classic young tot, as we call them - just walk around the park with the staff. That includes an older Black gentleman played by Bill Cobbs - not to be confused with another NBC star at the time Bill Cosby. Letting your daughter go off with him would be a colossally bad idea. But Norm (Cobbs) wears a bowtie and is harmless. Or is he? Regardless, he's a ride operator who uses what looks like an Apple IIGS to control the 'coaster. No wonder they're having problems.There's also a Star Tours-like ride where patrons get in a windowless van and rock around while viewing CD-ROM technology. No wonder they're having problems. Of course, it all comes to a head during a death-defying fight on the Thrill coaster between Jack Colson and the baddie. Did you think it would end some other way? For a TV movie that promises far more action than it delivers, Thrill is actually not that bad. Sabato and the daughter are likable, there is plenty of 90's fashion and tech on display, there's a rockin' intro with kids on skateboards aggro'ing it up around the park, and Sabato has a dream sequence involving the local mime. That right there might be worth investigation. Yes, we would have liked a more paramilitary-style Sabato crushing some heads in the tilt-a-whirl, but if we can't have that, Thrill - while actually far less than thrilling - delivers the next best thing.
... View MoreThis is Antonio Sabato Jr's movie! He looks great and gives a nice portrayal of a single father trying to raise a young daughter. Stephanie Kramer is cast as his sister, who owns an amusement park with a roller coaster called "Thrill". When someone threatens to harm the patrons of the park, Sabato Jr steps up to help his sister keep the park safe.This movie is soooooo mid-'90s--it is really cute, Sabato Jr is hot and Stephanie Kramer looks great. Another reviewer remarked about the opening sequence in a negative way. I disagree--that was what had me hooked on the movie to start! Fun movie!
... View More1. The acting is down-to-earth realistic. There isn't glamor like the big budget movies the main actors are usually in, and that makes it realistic.2. Thrill was filmed at the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk in Santa Cruz, California. I worked there as a ride operator for 2 1/2 years, and miss that job.3. The plot was realistic. As I stated before, there wasn't any glitz and glamor, except the fact that Theresa's home is owned by a professional athlete (my husband and I don't like sports, so I can't remember who the athlete is). If she were really financially in trouble, she could have sold the house, or car.4. Realistic special FX. The FX I know of; The roller coaster isn't run by a computer, nor is it laid out like the computer indicated. The log ride was manually triggered to stop the boats before the fall (I loved working on that ride). The rides that were running without ride operators were most likely turned on with the operators blocked out and some had to have something pushing a pedal down, like a brick. The train operator probably crouched down inside the engine cabin. The trains' horn was heard, and I know that there is a string you have to pull on.5. Last, but not least; The romance between Anne and Jack is heartwarming, and realistic. I honestly think there is room for a sequel.
... View MoreReading the plot outline may lead you to think that this is something like "Rollercoaster". That it ain´t. This makes even the 1977 Sensurround schlockbuster look like a masterpiece. The actors (mostly fair ones actually) wrestle with a inept if not inane script. Direction, story, photo, music, well everything really screams "low budget"! If the ultracheap MTV-stylewannabe opening sequence doesn´t make you reach for the zapper nothing will.There´s 90 minutes of my life I won´t get back!
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