Final Ascent (TV Movie 2000) Poster

(2000 TV Movie)

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2/10
Such a bad action movie it ends up as a very entertaining comedy
maralex20 April 2001
This is a seriously bad film. Everyone concerned must have worked very hard to make it this dreadful. It's a long time since I've seen actors perched on the top of a plastic rock in a studio trying frantically to convince us that they're on the top of a high mountain despite the cheap backdrop that tells us otherwise. The plot was horribly familiar, a group of crooks chasing the missing loot from the robbery that went wrong while a saintly father, who needed a good haircut, tried to save his one surviving daughter from the clutches of the desperados. His youngest daughter was killed falling three feet off the plastic rock right at the start of the film, which gave me the first good laugh of the evening. The actors had terrible dialogue, and did their best to match it with their acting efforts. What saved this dire movie was the fact that it was so unintentionally funny. Strong men were falling to their knees with altitude sickness as they strolled up a gentle slope that I could manage, and so could my old dog. Then, suddenly, they'd be scaling a mountain face with snow on the ground, only to emerge into a flat grassy space with no sign of the snow. A massive avalanche was avoided by one of the characters with a small jump to his left, but then it couldn't have been as bad as it looked because it didn't take a single bush or tree with it as it passed. The father and his daughter were meant to be keeping one step ahead of the gang of crooks at one stage, but ended up about two feet away from them, eyeballing the chief villain through a clump of grasses in a lake. Luckily they were able to duck beneath the water just as his beady eyes lighted on them, and despite some awe-inspiring double takes from the daughter's boyfriend, the villain decided he hadn't seen anything after all. I rather wish I hadn't.
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Lightning Strikes Twice
anarchy-1126 November 2000
I thought the De Niro/Pacino faceoff in Heat was a once-in-a-lifetime chance to see two of our premier actors engage in a mano-a-mano display of their craft--until now. Watching Muldoon and Sabato exchange lines in their sinisterly similar monotone, one recalls perhaps Olivier and Barrymore treading the boards at the Old Vic. A critic (I believe it was Pauline Kael) once said of Muldoon: "He has all the emotional range of a piece of oak furniture." And yet here Sabato matches him in the lumber department, splinter for splinter.

Final Ascent is a remake of Cliffhanger, except without any of the good parts. And if it seems merely mediocre, wait until the last act when it enters the realm of the truly terrible. Watch as our heroine parachutes hundreds of feet off of a mountain, and then climbs approximately twelve feet back up the same mountain to save the character that had been standing right next to her. Watch her climb 10,000 feet in the snow with no gloves and never once give any indication that it's cold. And watch as another character is buried underneath an avalanche, and yet emerges without a trace of snow on him.

The other big reason to watch this movie is Heidi Noelle Lenhart. She runs around a lot and seems very serious about something (maybe a relationship) but I wasn't sure what she was carrying on about because she's just so cute. Her little nose gets so red and runny that you just want to tell her, "Stop chasing the bad people, go back to the lodge, wrap yourself up in a blanket and have a nice warm brandy or maybe some Rumple Minz. And for gosh sakes put some gloves on."

Final Ascent is above all a film for fans of great acting. And just as De Niro one-upped his rival in the hearts of most moviegoers, here it is Muldoon who emerges victorious: he is perhaps the least expressive actor of his generation. Sabato should keep Muldoon around as a sidekick (maybe they could remake an old Bob Hope/Bing Crosby "Road" movie?), because he comes off like Michael Caine by comparison. Muldoon sums it up best when he comes down with altitude sickness and pukes: "What's the matter, you've never thrown up before?" Yes we have Pat. Yes we have.
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6/10
Our chicken has flown the coop!
sol121831 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
(There are Spoilers) Not at all that bad cliff-hanger type of movie with some stunning photography, which the maker of the film didn't skimp on, and a lot of unintentional laughs. That had you feeling at times that it was a comedy not a serious crime drama. What I can't understand is why the movie ended with the Mr. Big behind this caper is only not apprehended but even exposed? It's as if he, it could well have been a she, never existed at all! This after were told over and over by the head law enforcement agent in the movie Agent Burrard, J. Douglas Stewart, just how important this person is!

The bad guys in "Final Ascent" aren't exactly a bunch of master criminals in that their so wacky and incompetent that they end up not trusting each other feeling, correctly, that there's an undercover DOJ, Department of Justice, agent in their mist. Even worse the head guy who comes across as being the most incompetent of them all Viggo ,Patrick Muldoon, who then in his paranoia and inability to grasp what exactly is happening kills by kicking him out of a plane the very person Ray, Byron Lucas, who has the 30 million in government bonds that he and his gang ripped off. Viggo's act of madness and stupidity has Ray and the bonds land on top of an 10,000 foot high snow capped mountain in the frozen Rockies!

Trying to get to the bonds Viggo and his boys get to join this mountain climbing group who are scaling the mountain where they landed on, Mills Peak. It's then when the fun really begins to happen with Viggo losing it, together with his gang of hoods, as they get closer and closer to their objective, the 30 million in bonds. As the air gets thinner and thinner and Viggo & Co. brains get more and more, due to the thin air, swollen until he completely freaks out and ends up free-falling, without his precious bonds, to his death some 10,000 feet below.

There's also a side story, that's no where as funny but much more interesting, in "Final Ascent" that has to do with the head climber Beth, Heidi Levhert, and her dad Paul, Jurgen Prochnow, together with her boyfriend the hunky and handsome David, Antonio Sabato. All end up surviving this disastrous climb in that they besides having to put up with Viggo and his gang had to overcome their, Beth & Paul, on personal guilt. Beath & Paul felt responsible in the death of, Beth's sister and Paul's daughter, Mary ,Kimberly Warnat, who fall to her death on the same mountain,Mills Peak,at the start of the film.
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10/10
Better Villain than Most
Cinefilexxx20 March 2003
Okay, this is a low budget flick that wants to be big, but to its credit is a villain with foibles. When the baddie in this flick gets altitude sickness, it grounds this picture in reality and adds depth to the villain's character. When he keeps climbing because of his avarice...stopping at nothing to collect his money atop the mountain, we cannot help but delight in his worsening physical state. Heidi Noelle Lenhart is no Julia Roberts but is highly watchable nonetheless. Perhaps this script would have been better with more money behind it, since the characters and dialogue are quite good. Overall, this film kept me watching.
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10/10
Good story, Mediocre execution
elaineretner17 March 2003
I enjoyed watching this film, but felt that it lacked the production value that could have made it superb. The characters were developed well, but performances were uneven. The best thing I can say about this film is that it has good dialogue and characters. This must have been a low budget effort.
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10/10
Lots of tension and cleverness
marissabgood27 March 2003
I recently watched this film and enjoyed the tension and clever plot developments that keep the viewer nervous that beautiful heroine Heidi Noelle Lenhart will fall into the hands of Pat Muldoon, the villain. The acting by some of the supporting characters could have been better. It seems as though the writers had defined characterizations that the actors could not quite manage to pull off. The father has this accent and poor line delivery that really get in the way of understanding what he is saying. But, Antonio Sabato is a hunk and provides constant eye candy for all the female audience members. I thought that David W. Smith's directing was terribly inconsistent. The production value was fair, since it was clear the filmmaker was not working with Hollywood's big budgets. Ultimately, I recommend this picture for those who can appreciate a good story that has only average production value.
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10/10
Well-done TV movie with great father/daughter relationship
singingbabies2 July 2001
This picture tells the story of a father and daughter trying to overcome the loss of a loved one. Without giving anything away, they need to work together to battle the bad guys. Mountain climbers will love this picture. It's full of interesting twists and turns and has some very good characters. Check it out on Fox Family or on video!
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10/10
A young girl saves her father and a group of climbers
pebblespebbles6 December 2004
Alright, the film is like "Cliffhanger" only no budget, but I like the bad guy getting altitude sickness, as one other reviewer wrote. It's fun to see him get progressively sicker but to keep climbing for the money. Some action at the end is so poorly directed that the young girl parachutes down and gets back up too quickly to save her dad. The casting on this film is weak with many of the secondary characters. I assume these were not "Hollywood" hires. Some clever dialogue, though. The pacing of the film seemed good. Heidi Noelle Lenhart comes across as quite likable. In fact, it was her that kept me watching. In the end, this could have been a better film with more money and better secondary actors.
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10/10
Final Ascent
brianforfilm11 August 2007
This film was tense and exciting, especially for fans of "Cliffhanger." This film focuses more on a relationship between a father and a daughter. Although the directing of key action sequences seemed a bit too low budget, the drama itself was great. I enjoyed Heidi Noelle Lenhart and thought that Sabato, Jr was good as well. The bad guy gets altitude sickness but is so greedy that he keeps climbing. Avarice gets the better of him. A very satisfying ending that leaves me hoping for a sequel. The only real flaw here is the lack of big budget effects that could have elevated this picture to the next level. I give this a high rating based on the characters and the story.
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10/10
Father and Daughter Film That Hit Home!
sheilastein200320 February 2003
Our family has experienced the loss of a loved one leaving a strained relationship between my daughter and my husband. I found the relationship between the father and daughter in "Final Ascent" to be so accurate that I was brought to tears. I enjoyed the plot and the action just fine, but the relationship between the father and daughter really rang true in a way that I haven't really seen since "Ordinary People." This film really moved me. Great family movie!
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