The Curse of the Bigfoot (1975) -
Horror films are a hard genre for me to hate since bad horror films can still be watchable, whether you're referring to so-bad-they're-good fare or camp/cheesiness, but what I can't handle is a horror film which is almost completely joyless like this one. Granted, I liked the first 30 minutes a bit more than the remaining hour, but this isn't saying much. A few of the bigfoot shots, while not good by any means, looked so ridiculous I initially thought this would be typical B-movie fare (I was on board with the film for the first 10 minutes). I also found the presenter's meltdown at a student during the classroom scenes to be pretty amusing to watch. As a whole, I wouldn't be surprised if the first half hour was put in just to pad out the length as if the filmmakers felt the 60 minute span for the main plot line wasn't enough to fill a feature length film, but awkward pacing aside, I didn't completely hate this section. That the remainder of the first 30 minutes were so unengaging though seemed to act as a warning sign for what was to come. I swear, the final hour has got to be one of the most bland and joyless things I've ever seen. To run through a brief list of its flaws, the characters have no personality whatsoever and they all blend into each other, the few bits of bigfoot action we got were super brief and poorly directed, and the meandering dialogue between the students was so dull to listen to. It's just a couple minutes of forgettable bigfoot scenes plus a ton of meandering conversations/bland characters to fill the rest of the hour. Again, the design of bigfoot looks super ridiculous, so you'd think this wouldn't be so joyless, but the few close-ups of bigfoot's face are about all the film has going for it in terms of cheesiness. That said, I will grant that one scene in the final hour was decently effective. Stumbling across the mummified remains of bigfoot in a mountain's hidden cave was an unnerving concept, but any potential the film had here fizzled out after five minutes. As it stands, this is in the running as my least favorite horror film of all time.
Horror films are a hard genre for me to hate since bad horror films can still be watchable, whether you're referring to so-bad-they're-good fare or camp/cheesiness, but what I can't handle is a horror film which is almost completely joyless like this one. Granted, I liked the first 30 minutes a bit more than the remaining hour, but this isn't saying much. A few of the bigfoot shots, while not good by any means, looked so ridiculous I initially thought this would be typical B-movie fare (I was on board with the film for the first 10 minutes). I also found the presenter's meltdown at a student during the classroom scenes to be pretty amusing to watch. As a whole, I wouldn't be surprised if the first half hour was put in just to pad out the length as if the filmmakers felt the 60 minute span for the main plot line wasn't enough to fill a feature length film, but awkward pacing aside, I didn't completely hate this section. That the remainder of the first 30 minutes were so unengaging though seemed to act as a warning sign for what was to come. I swear, the final hour has got to be one of the most bland and joyless things I've ever seen. To run through a brief list of its flaws, the characters have no personality whatsoever and they all blend into each other, the few bits of bigfoot action we got were super brief and poorly directed, and the meandering dialogue between the students was so dull to listen to. It's just a couple minutes of forgettable bigfoot scenes plus a ton of meandering conversations/bland characters to fill the rest of the hour. Again, the design of bigfoot looks super ridiculous, so you'd think this wouldn't be so joyless, but the few close-ups of bigfoot's face are about all the film has going for it in terms of cheesiness. That said, I will grant that one scene in the final hour was decently effective. Stumbling across the mummified remains of bigfoot in a mountain's hidden cave was an unnerving concept, but any potential the film had here fizzled out after five minutes. As it stands, this is in the running as my least favorite horror film of all time.