Bigfoot
Bigfoot debuts tonight on Syfy at 9 p.m. Eastern.
This week’s Saturday night cheese platter, Bigfoot, is at least half-a-cut above other Asylum/Syfy co-productions, such as Almighty Thor and Mega Piranha. It’s an unmitigated piece of crap, but in its clumsy way, it makes an effort to deliver the goods. Like Bong Joon-ho’s The Host, arguably the best big-monster movie of recent years, it doesn’t go for that technique of building up suspense (and trying to conceal the limits of the special-effects budget) by postponing the audience’s first clear view of the menace. Set in South Dakota, it’s only a few minutes old before the title character looms up and takes charge of the screen. Unlike the usual furry, linebacker-sized humanoid, this Bigfoot looks like an elongated version of John Landis’ moth-eaten monkey costume in Schlock, and stands as tall as King Kong. (He steps on people and squishes them with his literal “big foot.”) It used to be that the best compliment you could pay a TV-movie was that it actually looked like a movie; The best compliment I can pay Bigfoot is that it actually looks like a dumb TV-movie, instead of a demo reel made over the weekend by the producer’s kids, to show to investors looking for an easy tax write-off. Maybe it says something about Syfy’s faith in their product this time that they settled for such a generic title, after such hard-sell marquee items as Mega Python Vs. Gatoroid and Dinocroc Vs. Supergator.
Bigfoot is actually Danny Partridge Vs. Greg Brady. The movie’s real selling point is a master stroke of stunt casting intended to turn the whole thing into an over-the-top pop-culture joke (like the channel’s recent, and deeply unclean, Jersey Shore Shark Attack). Danny Bonaduce is the film’s villain, and Barry Williams is its… co-villain, or maybe just its nuisance. Their characters used to be in a rock band that had a hit but disintegrated in the 1980s, and now each of them is still trying to get something over on the other, though they’re not above scheming together to using their public feud to their benefit. They have plenty of grounds for hating each other: For one thing, Bonaduce once slept with Williams’ mother. Whenever Bonaduce taunts Williams about this, which happens a lot, you immediately form an involuntary mental image of Bonaduce on top of Florence Henderson, which is exactly what you’re supposed to do. The movie has a nominal heroine (a deputy sheriff, played by Sherilyn Fenn, who learns that, years ago, Bigfoot whacked her dad), but she’s secondary to the two warring goons, and by the end, Fenn is just standing around in cutaways, watching the real action happen to somebody else. (Her boss and mentor, the sheriff, is played by Bruce Davison, who also directed; Davison may have seen this project as a chance to get paid for an inside joke, given that he starred in, and directed a few episodes of, the TV sitcom version of Harry And The Hendersons.)
Bonaduce’s character is a cynical, environmentalist-baiting radio host who is trying to put on an “’80s flashback” music festival as part of his efforts to jump-start his own career, while Williams is a sanctimonious “tree-hugger” who causes trouble by showing up at the festival site with his posse of worshipful young groupies and chaining them to the ground-clearing equipment. When Bonaduce sees Williams, he shouts, “Simon Quinn, are you kidding me?”—so we in the audience will know that Williams’ character name is “Simon Quinn,” see? In response, Williams shouts back, “The desecration stops now, Daniel Henderson,” presumably so we’ll know that Bonaduce’s character’s name is Daniel Henderson, except that the rest of the movie pretty well establishes that his first name is actually supposed to be “Harley.” I guess Williams slipped and called Bonaduce by his real name, and if anyone pointed this out to Davison on the set, he shrugged and said, “To hell with it, we’ll fix it in post-production.” Probably when the film was in post-production, whoever had the keys to the sound department was in a hurry to get home for dinner. Williams also calls Bonaduce “a pathetic excuse for a musician whose only talent is the manipulation of others with sinister lies to propagate his own self-image.” To which Bonaduce replies, “Wow, that sounds bad when you say it.”