William Shatner stars as Matt Stone, a sleazy con artist/gigolo who prowls Florida looking for rich women to seduce and bilk out of their money. When his current mark confronts him after seeing him playing tonsil hockey with a belly dancer, Stone kills her in a fit of rage.
In search of his next payday, Stone gains the confidence of Julia (Ruth Roman), a wealthy older woman who introduces him to Ann (Jennifer Bishop), a lonely widower. Coincidentally, Stone had recently given a ride to Ann’s precocious daughter Tina (Kim Nicholas) after almost running her down—don’t ask. Matt and Ann strike up a relationship, while Tina grows suspicious of the leisure suit-wearing lothario. (The film’s working title was the icky WANT A RIDE, LITTLE GIRL?)
When Stone’s old cellmate Karate Pete (GOLDFINGER’s Harold Sakata!) rolls into town in his RV, it’s not because he misses his buddy. Karate Pete has heard Stone is working a hustle and wants in on the action. The reunion turns deadly, Tina discovers what Stone is capable of, and must convince her mother that he’s up to no good before it’s too late. Also, it’s fun to write “Karate Pete.”
Directed by William GrefĂ© (STANLEY, MAKO: THE JAWS OF DEATH, WHISKEY MOUNTAIN with Christopher George), IMPULSE is a sweaty, grimy sleazer that predates the similar SCREAM FOR HELP (1984) and THE STEPFATHER (1987). Shatner, embarking on the low-budget era that would bring us THE DEVIL’S RAIN (my 1975 selection!) and the creepy KINGDOM OF THE SPIDERS, was still five years away from reviving his flagging career with STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE. Here he looks both bemused and embarrassed by the material, though GrefĂ© makes sure to placate his star by having a bevy of women throw themselves at The Shat.
One wonders what would have become of Shatner without the career rebirth that resulted from the success of STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN (1982) and subsequent TREK flicks as well as the tv series T.J. HOOKER. Is there a multiverse where that Shatner embraced and excelled in the exploitation underbelly, carving out a straight-to-video career to rival that of Wings Hauser?
Up next — more Shatner with 1975’s THE DEVIL’S RAIN! – Dan Taylor











