Publicity
poster for Missing Link (1988) and
front cover of official DVD for Missing
Link (2019) (© David and Carol Hughes/Universal Pictures; (© Chris
Butler/Annapurna Pictures/Laika/Universal Artists/AGC – both images are reproduced
here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review
purposes only)
Today, ShukerNature reviews two cryptozoology-themed movies with the same title – Missing
Link – but dramatically different formats and approaches, as will be seen.
MISSING
LINK (1988)
The
full cover for the official VHS videocassette of Missing Link, the live-action movie released in 1988 (© David and
Carol Hughes/Universal Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial
Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
Directed and written by David and Carol
Hughes, Missing Link is produced in
the style of a wildlife documentary with a voiceover narration by actor Michael
Gambon. It is set in Africa one million years ago, and follows a voyage of
discovery across this continent by a lone adult male 'man-ape' belonging to the
early hominin species Australopithecus
robustus. He is seeking others of his own species after having fled from
the direct ancestors of ours, Homo sapiens,
when his entire family was viciously slaughtered by them, leaving him as the
only remaining representative of his species in that area.
This very unusual movie is more than a
little reminiscent of another one that I watched and reviewed here on ShukerNature not long ago, Jonathan Livingston Seagull, in that
although there is not a great deal of plot, the cinematography (again the work
of the Hugheses) is absolutely spectacular. Missing
Link was filmed on location in various Namibian national parks filled with
iconic African fauna such as lions, elephants, giraffes, gazelles, zebras,
mongooses, wildebeests, and those veritable avian locusts the red-billed
queleas, whose immense flocks swarm and swirl through the sky like living
composite super-organisms.
The unnamed australopithecine is played
by Peter Elliott, and the fur suit as well as the constructed head and face that
transform him into the man-ape are very impressive indeed. Viewing this movie
constantly reminded me of the much later TV documentary series Walking With Cavemen (first screened in
2003, it was a successor to the highly successful, ground-breaking Walking With Dinosaurs and Walking with Beasts series).
This
memorable movie's unnamed, unconventional star – a lone surviving australopithecine
ape-man (© David and Carol Hughes/Universal Pictures – reproduced here on a
strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
Certainly, Missing Link was indeed far ahead of its
time, but its lack of any major storyline or dialogue (other than Gambon's
occasional words) probably explained why it was not a commercial success when
released, and why it is seemingly not available on DVD. (Following its cinema
debut, it was released in VHS videocassette format, examples of which are
occasionally listed for sale online, but these are usually quite pricey.)
This is a great shame, because Missing Link is very deserving of being
seen, as a tragic testament to how our ancestors almost certainly contributed
to these distant relatives' eventual extinction - unless the mysterious agogwe,
séhité, kakundakari, and certain other diminutive hairy man-beasts reported
across Africa in modern times are relict survivors?
Offering a taster of the dramatic
wildlife vistas and compelling content of Missing
Link, here
is an official trailer for this very different but definitely must-watch movie.
MISSING
LINK (2019)
Photographic
still for Missing Link, the animated
feature film released in 2019, with Dora the Yeti Elder seen at far right (©
Chris Butler/Annapurna Pictures/Laika/Universal Artists/AGC – reproduced here
on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes
only)
Directed
by Chris Butler, Missing Link is a
delightfully droll animated crypto-classic originally released in early 2019, and tells the
story of what
is supposedly the very last sasquatch (a restrained but all the more
hilarious
vocal tour de force by Zach Galifianakis). Namely, a very sensitive male
bigfoot named Susan (don't ask!), who hires adventurer Sir Lionel Frost
(voiced
with great aplomb by Hugh Jackman) to end his loneliness by transporting
him to
the Himalayas where he can be united with his nearest kin, the yetis.
(Cryptozoological purists be warned: the yetis here are portrayed as
having white fur, a traditional if mistaken representation, as according
to local eyewitness reports these mystery man-beasts are actually
brown- or red-furred.)
Along the way, they meet up with a former
significant other of Sir Lionel, the feisty Adelina Fortnight (Zoe Saldana),
and are pursued tenaciously by the evil henchmen of Frost's nemesis, the repressive,
insane Lord Piggot-Dunceby (Stephen Fry). His obsessive goal is to prevent
Frost's discovery of both Susan the bigfoot and the yetis of Shangri-La from
ever becoming known to the world at large.
Speaking of which: my favourite character
is the etiolated, secretive, and deliciously paranoid Yeti Elder, Dora, voiced
with acerbic zeal by Emma Thompson. Also worth listening out for are Little Britain stars David Walliams as
Lemuel Lint, Sir Lionel's former assistant, who barely escapes with his life
from his ever-perilous role, and Matt Lucas as Mr Collick, the no-less neurotic
assistant of Lord Piggot-Dunceby.
Publicity
poster for Missing Link with
the Loch Ness monster (© Chris Butler/Annapurna Pictures/Laika/Universal
Artists/AGC – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for
educational/review purposes only)
Full of the dry, quip-driven humour that
always appeals to me, but with a hefty dollop of good old-fashioned visual
slapstick thrown in too, Missing Link
also includes many spectacularly eyecatching scenes (one of which features fellow cryptid Nessie, the Loch Ness monster!), but none more so than the splendorous
ice palaces and hidden valley of the yetis. Watching this charming movie is
without a doubt a very enjoyable and highly entertaining way to pass a birthday
evening, so that is precisely what I did on my most recent birthday.
To prove my assertion, here
is a very funny official trailer for Missing
Link – and here
is another one!
A version of this double-bill review of cryptozoology-linked movies can also be accessed here on my Shuker In MovieLand blog.
You know, I once read that there are two kinds of yeti. One is brown-furred and just a sort of ape, standing no more than 5 feet tall if I remember right. It is not very dangerous. The other is white-furred, much taller at 7 or 8 feet, much more dangerous, and possibly as intelligent as human beings! Granted, all this came from a novel, and one written for teenagers at that. :) Still, the height of Zana was nearer 7-foot than 5. The novel was Himalayan Adventure by Terry something-or-other. His books thoroughly entertained me in my early teens, but seem hard to find today on account of their very generic titles: Himalayan Adventure (with the yeti legends), Amazon Adventure, African Adventure, etc. There wasn't a whole lot of cryptozoological content in them, anyhow.
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