Killer's Delight

1978

Action / Horror / Mystery / Thriller

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Plot summary

A detective tracks a serial killer through San Francisco.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
July 30, 2021 at 03:41 AM

Director

Top cast

Susan Sullivan as Dr. Carol Thompson
John Karlen as Danny
Anne-Marie Martin as First Victim - Girl with Dog
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
790.49 MB
1280*682
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 26 min
Seeds ...
1.43 GB
1920*1024
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 26 min
Seeds ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Coventry 6 / 10

Out of respect for the victims, the brand of the vehicle was changed. Names are different, too.

"Killer's Delight" opens with the familiar statement that the story you're about to watch is based on true events. You don't need to be Hercule Poirot or Sherlock Holmes to figure out the events in question refer to the bloody killing spree of notorious US serial-killer Ted Bundy, mixed with a little bit of Ed "the Co-Ed Killer" Kemper. Like usual, many important details are changed out of respect for the real victims. The modus operandi of picking up hitchhikers and almost exclusively targeting young attractive girls is kept in place, but the locations and names are different. Remarkable here, though, is how the makers also replaced Bundy's iconic beige Volkswagen Beetle with an old yellow Ford Van.

I have a passion for horror/thriller movies based on true crimes, and appreciated "Killer's Delight" quite a lot, but it's obviously a cheap, amateurish, and largely improvised B-movie. There also isn't much of a plot. Crazed killer, with mommy issues, picks up young girls and brutally murders them. Obsessive police detective tracks his down, but he's always too late to prevent another tragic murder.

Just because "Killer's Delight" is so low budget, the film nevertheless comes across as a raw and often shocking thriller. The opening scene immediately sets the right tone, as a ramshackle old Ford van parks at the edge of cliff, and the driver nihilistically throws the naked body of his last victim into the deep. Don't know about you, but I've seen opening sequences that are far less attention-grabbing. There are more shocking moments throughout the film, including the death-struggle of the poor girl who works at the pool and the unexpectedly downbeat finale. Lead actor (and John Saxon lookalike) James Luisi does a decent job as the hardened cop, and receives good support as well, notably from Martin Speer, Susan Sullivan, John Karlen, and many incredibly pretty girls in tiny bikinis. It may not be a great movie, but "Killer's Delight" accurately captures the gritty, shameless, nasty flavors of 70s exploitation cinema, and that's why it comes recommended to my fellow fanatics of this era.

Reviewed by Hey_Sweden 6 / 10

Competent but undistinguished.

An early example of the serial killer features that would eventually proliferate, "Killer's Delight" takes its inspiration (apparently) from the crimes of the notorious real-life Ted Bundy. A disguise-happy creep (John Karlen, 'Dark Shadows') rides about in a yellow van and regularly abducts, tortures, and slaughters attractive young women. A police detective named DeCarlo (James Luisi, "The Hidden") realizes that these murders are the work of one person, and is coldly determined to stop him, no matter what he has to do.

"Killer's Delight" (also known as "The Sport Killer" and "The Dark Ride") goes through its exploitative paces adequately, with suspense, titillation, and very little in the way of gore. Here, screenwriter Maralyn Thoma and director Jeremy Hoenack try to maintain a balance between following the actions of the psycho, and the actions of the cop. It has time for some humor, as DeCarlo pals around with fellow detective Mike Mitelman (Martin Speer (Wes Cravens' "The Hills Have Eyes"), who was also the art director on this show). The film is sufficiently entertaining, if not exemplary in any way. Its biggest plot twist occurs in the final third when DeCarlo asks his paramour, psychiatrist Carol Thompson (lovely TV veteran Susan Sullivan, 'Falcon Crest' and 'Dharma & Greg'), to act as the bait in a trap for the creep.

With other familiar faces like Hilarie Thompson ("Nighthawks"), Anne-Marie Martin (the original "Prom Night"), and Buck Flower ("They Live"), in a cameo as a distraught witness, it's easy enough to watch "Killer's Delight", especially as it works to create a constant sense of creeping dread. Karlen is a standout as the murderer, the kind of character one feels filthy just watching.

Overall, a decent procedural / body count thriller, somewhat obscure these days but which die hard fans of the genre may want to seek out.

Six out of 10.

Reviewed by Scarecrow-88 7 / 10

Killer's Delight

San Francisco serial killer(John Karlen, in a chilling performance), in a yellow van, who assumes various disguises, stalks pretty young women, mostly hitch hikers, and it's up to Sargeant Vince De Carlo(James Luisi) to catch him. Not only is this fiend a sexual sadist, but he snaps bones, wears fake wigs and mustaches, and we get a glimpse at how bug-eyed crazy he can be during the act. Bodies piling up, including a college girl who was about to graduate that De Carlo knew personally(in correspondence with other films before, during, and after this particular movie, we see this girl almost get away running into the woods near the road off the freeway), the detective desperately needs extra manpower. With little help besides the minuscule number of cops already helping him, De Carlo, with some assistance from Detective Mike Mitelman(Martin Speer), will personally/doggedly pursue the psychopath. Susan Sullivan is a doctor who could be a potential victim(she is also having an affair with the married De Carlo)as she agrees to work as a girl to seductively draw him into a situation which would implicate him as the one responsible for the rash of killings by his hand.

While director Jeremy Hoenack doesn't dwell too much on the actual handiwork of Danny, he does allow us to enter that van on one particular occasion just to see how vicious a deviant he could be, breaking a finger back, ripping the shirt from the victim's body while smiling with a Satanic grin that sends shivers down your spine. Hoenack mentions in an interview that Danny came to fruition as Ted Bundy(who wasn't caught at the time)was killing girls in Seattle. Hoenack shot exclusively in San Francisco, and there are a couple of impressive shots from a helicopter. He includes a disturbing crime scene photograph of one such victim, bones protruding from her legs and arms. And, Hoenack shoots a creepy opening scene featuring Danny chucking a dead naked body over a cliff. It's established that Danny has "mommy issues" which contribute psychologically to his night prowling, kidnapping, and execution of girls who remind him of her. Girls are sluts just like mom and he has to make sure they are unable to do what she did to his father. George Buck Flower(missing teeth)has a cameo as a citizen whose son finds a victim while fishing in a lake nearby. KILLER'S DELIGHT(titled THE SPORT KILLER on the DVD version I watched, released by Code Red)just proves that the 70's had lots of beautiful girls to gawk at, it's just tragic that many of them fall at the hands of this movie's wacko.

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