William Parcher said:
There's no big incentive to try to duplicate Patty.
Agreed. Bigfoot proponents seem to be under the bizarre impression that special effects artists should recreate the Patty costume out of their own pocket. Nevermind the expenses it would take to try each and every possible costume type (and people with different body types) to match up with Patty. That'd kill network sponsorship in a heartbeat. There's a little thing called "inflation" that needs to be taken into account when calculating Patterson's hypothetical budget.
And as far as I'm concerned, they should be getting Japanese special effects artists to do a recreation as well.
Of course a proper recreation would be filmed using the same camera and at about the same distance. Video could reveal flaws that would be masked by the format of film. The only attempt at recreation so far was recorded on video at a closer distance. It wasn't great. The costume really didn't look much like Patty. They obviously weren't trying hard.
I feel that in addition to your requirements, the recreation should be shot at a nonstandard film speed and then slowed down (Some have suggested that this is the reason for the "smooth movements"), only using natural lighting, and should be shot without doing any "white balancing" beforehand.
Here are all of the "recreation attempts" that I know of:
Green/McClarin - This "attempt" was done
using what appears to be a storebought gorilla costume. Of course, no skeptic in their right mind would suggest that Patterson was using an unaltered costume, so that kinda made this experiment pointless. Well, that, and it'd only rule out that Patterson didn't use that particular suit on someone with the same proportions as McClarin. Still, I'll give 'em credit for trying.
Optic Nerve/BBC - Didn't Dfoot claim that since the BBC didn't cough up the requested budget, John Vulich just recycled a costume and gave it a new head? That'd certainly explain why the suit had the wrong hair color. Has anyone ever tried contacting Optic Nerve Studios about this?
Greg Long/Philip Morris/Bob H. - To me, Long seemed to think that this could be done in one take instead of filming a take, comparing it to the original film, making adjustments, and repeating the process until he recreated the footage. Then you've gotta factor in problems like how they used a costume built by Philip Morris, used Bob H. instead of someone who was built like him when he claimed to have worn the suit, didn't try lengthening the arms, etc. Come to think of it, wasn't Bob H. hit by a car at some point in the past? If so (and assuming that's not what gave him "the walk" to begin with), that'd definitely affect his walking abilities. Hopefully, the delay in releasing the footage means that they realized their mistakes and used the delay to correct them.
Dfoot - Was sadly never completed or filmed. However, I feel that he did the best-looking job and showed how good low budget effects can look.
Should we count that "Best Evidence" segment as a recreation attempt?