Then PhotoRead and activate. Won't finish the book as fast as non-fiction books since you're looking for a movie like experience and that involves an immersion into the characters. If you've ever watched a movie and read the book you'll notice that they cut out a lot from the book and rewrite it so it fits the time of a movie.
So looking at that you'd be looking at spending 2 to 6 hours with a book depending on the number of pages and how much immersion / entertainment you seek.
The speed at which you rapid read is determine by how much you use regular reading rather than rhythmic perusal, superreading and dipping etc.
It's also determined by how well you honed your activation skills.
Rapid Reading is superreading and dipping, skittering and rhythmic perusal and analytical reading as necessary. If you leave out superreading and dipping you're left with skittering and rhythmic perusal as the fastest techniques you're choosing to use.
I have tried reading back to front and picking trigger words and forming questions before rapid read, but it doesnt help unlike non-fiction.
Reading the front and back is previewing. That's where you decide whether you're interested in the book.
If that hasn't helped dump the book for one that interests you.
use Postviewing to build a curiosity for the book that satisfies your purpose. During postviewing of a novel you can do a bit of activation, you'd probably ask who is the main character, where is it set, what's the mood of the book? What era is it set, Am I still interested in spending a couple of hours with this author.
If yes rapid read, and in case you missed it, rapid reading means using all the activation techniques that apply to what you're reading for your interest and purpose. So don't dump superreading, believe me some sections of the book are unnecessarily descriptive that you will get when you rapid read just like looking at the scene in a movie. You'll get all you need with a rapid read of those sections when you've already PhotoRead the book.
Alex