Current:Home > Scams'Sasquatch Sunset': Jesse Eisenberg is Bigfoot in possibly the strangest movie ever made -Wealth Navigators Hub
'Sasquatch Sunset': Jesse Eisenberg is Bigfoot in possibly the strangest movie ever made
View
Date:2025-04-12 04:35:56
“Sasquatch Sunset” may be the weirdest movie you've ever seen.
Where to begin?
Well, the film (in select theaters now, expands nationwide Friday) imagines the lives of a family of Sasquatches (aka Bigfoot) over the course of four seasons. The dialogue consists of grunts, moans and howls, and some scenes of Sasquatch sex and scatological pranks. For 90 minutes.
“Sunset” plays like a National Geographic project, albeit about a mythical creature that has parallels in other cultures, such as the Yeti in Asia and Chupacabra in Mexico. The movie's authentic look is the result of a deep dive by filmmaker brothers David and Nathan Zellner into the online Bigfoot fan community. No snickering, please.
And while the documentary-style movie – which ably melds pathos with comedy − stars Jesse Eisenberg (“Zombieland”) and Riley Keough (“Daisy Jones & the Six”), don’t count on recognizing them under layers of Bigfoot makeup.
In fact, Keough says, when she saw Eisenberg at the movie's Sundance Film Festival screening in January, “I felt I was meeting him for the first time, because I never saw his real face. We’d get to the makeup trailer and put on our Sasquatch faces and that’s all we ever saw.”
The Zellners as well as Keough and Eisenberg shared their thoughts with USA TODAY on crafting this unique cinematic experiment, which feels like a midnight cult film in the making.
What was the inspiration for 'Sasquatch Sunset'?
In 2011, the Zellners released a short film called “Sasquatch Birth Journal 2.” The hook was set. They spent the next decade crafting a feature-length script and securing funding from skeptical investors.
“Most Bigfoot movies were either family fare, like ‘Harry and the Hendersons,’ or just horror movies, and we felt there was a film in there from the creature’s point of view,” says David Zellner. “OK, it’s not likely what people are asking for. But we hope people enjoy it.”
Nathan Zellner also stars as one of the Bigfoot creatures. “I guess I have the build for it,” he jokes. “But, yes, David always had me in mind to play the brooding alpha-male giant. It was like wearing the best Halloween costume ever, for a month.”
How long did it take for the cast of ‘Sasquatch Sunset’ to get into makeup?
Eisenberg, 40, and Keough, 34, agree on the best costume part, but perhaps don’t share their castmate’s enthusiasm for being entombed in the garb, which Eisenberg says took nearly two hours to put on.
“Imagine glue on every part of your face, then prosthetics, then hair,” he says. “The amazing thing is we do all kind of look different and a bit like ourselves. But I have never done anything as taxing and excruciating as this movie. Walking 20 feet was brutal. They’d say, ‘OK, now lift this leaf,’ and you’d be like, ‘I need a break.’ ”
Keough says she had to “meditate and center myself” before the shooting day began. “Walking to the bathroom alone, you were just giving up,” she says, laughing at the memory. “I thought I was truly going to collapse. We sound like babies, but it was really challenging.”
How did David and Nathan Zellner create their Bigfoot world in ‘Sasquatch Sunset’?
Beyond the realistic makeup, which took its cue from infamous grainy 1967 footage of an alleged Bigfoot in what was dubbed the Patterson-Gimlin film (which the movie nods to in its opening sequence), the Zellners visited websites dedicated to Bigfoot lore.
“On YouTube, you’ll find people showing piles of branches that they believe are Sasquatch nests, or twisted sticks that they think are Sasquatch glyphs, and other people talking about burial rituals, so we just borrowed from all of that,” says David Zellner.
Lending further realism was the choice to set the monthlong shoot in dense Northern California forests, supposedly the home range of Sasquatch. “The location was perfect, but also tough,” he says. “We dealt with extreme weather, we shot with only natural light. There was nothing controlled about the environment, but hopefully that gives the film its ‘70s nature-doc look.”
Why was making ‘Sasquatch Sunset’ so freeing for Riley Keough and Jesse Eisenberg?
In one of the movie’s most outrageous scenes, the Sasquatch brood gets upset and starts throwing its excrement. Standard ape behavior, but not so common for humans. And yet, enacting those scenes was wildly liberating, Keough says.
“I don’t find body humor funny normally, but when I read that scene on the page, it was just so funny,” she says. “I loved it all, it was the experience I’m always searching for when acting, total freedom in a character, no self-consciousness.”
Eisenberg echoes that. “This is something you’d do in an acting class, but never in a real movie, it’s just so experimental. There are scenes as hilarious as you’d find in any movie, and emotional ones, too.”
When Eisenberg's Bigfoot character is suddenly imperiled, the actor's wife, Anna, could not contain herself at the premiere. "She was literally weeping," says an incredulous Eisenberg. "And she’s never wept for me!”
Did 'Sasquatch Sunset' sway Riley Keough or Jesse Eisenberg that Bigfoot is real?
So did making “Sasquatch Sunset” convince either actor that Bigfoot might exist?
“I hope there’s at least one out there,” Keough says. Eisenberg is more philosophical: “I’m an angry skeptical person from downtown, but I love how the Sasquatch mythology represents a need to get back to nature.”
What did real apes think of 'Sasquatch Sunset'?
Though Sasquatch is likely to remain more myth than reality, the way the creatures are portrayed in this film evoked a strong reaction from a few Bonobo apes who saw it when the filmmakers consulted with primatologists.
“One of them in particular was watching, just really engaged, and then he casually lifted up his hand and smashed the (TV) screen as hard as he could,” Eisenberg says. “I guess that was his way of trying to dominate the creatures on the screen. But I’ll take that as one huge opposable thumbs-up for us from that community.”
veryGood! (68)
Related
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Donald Trump’s EPA Chief of Staff Says the Trump Administration Focused on Clean Air and Clean Water
- Text of the policy statement the Federal Reserve released Wednesday
- 'We have to get this photo!': Nebraska funnel cloud creates epic wedding picture backdrop
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Inmate identified as white supremacist gang leader among 3 killed in Nevada prison brawl
- Jets’ McCutcheon has made mental health awareness his mission since best friend’s death in 8th grade
- Vermont gets respite from flood warnings as US senator pushes for disaster aid package
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Donald Trump’s EPA Chief of Staff Says the Trump Administration Focused on Clean Air and Clean Water
Ranking
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Kansas stops enforcing a law against impersonating election officials
- Georgia prosecutors committed ‘gross negligence’ with emails in ‘Cop City’ case, judge says
- Donald Trump’s EPA Chief of Staff Says the Trump Administration Focused on Clean Air and Clean Water
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- 14 Arrested at Comic-Con for Alleged Sex Trafficking
- Brad Paisley invites Post Malone to perform at Grand Ole Opry: 'You and I can jam'
- Inmate set for sentencing in prison killing of Boston gangster James ‘Whitey’ Bulger
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Colorado clerk who became hero to election conspiracists set to go on trial for voting system breach
Philadelphia-area man sentenced to 7 1/2 years for his role in blowing up ATMs during 2020 protests
Alabama, civic groups spar over law restricting assistance with absentee ballot applications
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Watch: Orioles' Jackson Holliday crushes grand slam for first MLB home run
Why Below Deck's Kate Chastain Is Skipping Aesha Scott's Wedding
Detroit man convicted in mass shooting that followed argument over vehicle blocking driveway