Bigfoot was so ubiquitous in mid-’70s pop culture,
you can’t blame the guy for wanting to take a vacation. So instead of thumping
around the forests of the Pacific Northwest, as he did in countless movies and
TV shows during this period, the Artist Sometimes Known as Sasquatch spends Snowbeast chilling at a ski resort. Made
for TV and running a brisk 86 minutes, this low-budget thriller boasts a
coherent script by Joseph Stefano (who, in better times, wrote Psycho for Alfred Hitchcock), and
features a handful of competent actors who keep things lively. Robert Logan,
star of the Wilderness Family movies,
plays Tony, the manager of a Colorado ski resort owned by his tough
grandmother, Carrie (Sylvia Sidney). When a terrified skier reports an attack
by a mysterious creature on a ski slope, Carrie (in true Jaws rip-off fashion) demands the incident be kept quiet so panic
doesn’t derail the resort’s upcoming winter carnival. Tony starts to
investigate the attack, but he’s distracted by the arrival of one-time Olympic
skiing champ Gar (Bo Svenson) and Gar’s wife, investigative reporter Ellen
(Yvette Mimieux). Cue the psychodrama!
It turns out Tony once dated Ellen, and Gar
has been gun-shy about skiing since his Olympic success. So, in addition to the
usual business of a monster attack every 10 minutes or so and semi-suspenseful
scenes of Our Heroes snowmobiling around the woods and looking for Bigfoot, Snowbeast features the type of contrived
character interplay one usually finds in Irwin Allen disaster movies. The sheer
number or events in Stefano’s script sorta makes up for the film’s lack of
genuine terror, and even though Snowbeast
feels padded—a sequence of Mimieux snooping around the woods goes on far too
long—Snowbeast basically delivers the
B-movie goods by introducing archetypal characters and then keeping the
audience guessing about who will survive. The monster stuff is disappointing,
of course, but director Herb Wallerstein wisely limits our glimpses of the
titular critter to flashes of claws and feet, plus one or two split-second
peeks at the creature’s hairy face. This is cheesy stuff, without question, but
by the low standards of ’70s Bigfoot cinema, Snowbeast is fairly entertaining.
Snowbeast:
FUNKY
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