Look at Patty's right shoulder in the above motion frame, note the crack midway through the clavicle, it looks like the edge of a vest moving with the arm swing.
The 2 frames were taken at a different camera angle, with different lighting
Admitting that the fingers are bending isn't a game breaker anyway. This doesn't exclude other explanations that put a man in the suit.
We covered the ' extensions ' he used over at BFF .. I'll try to find you a pic if you think it's really necessary .. They are simply rubber gorilla hands ( gloves ) .. The wearers fingers end smewhere near the palm of the glove.. Nothing expensive or sophisticated at at all ..I don't see the doll hand animation demonstrating anything useful. The 2 frames were taken at a different camera angle, with different lighting and very close up. Not the same situation at all. The shadows and light reflection seem to change more than the fingers actually do. There is certainly no apparent bend in the fingers. Why doesn't someone post a similar animation using their actual hand, at 100+ feet from the camera? Keep your hand static and turn your wrist at various angles. Make sure not to change the lighting or the camera position. Make an animation then we might have a comparison.
Admitting that the fingers are bending isn't a game breaker anyway. This doesn't exclude other explanations that put a man in the suit. It makes things a bit more complicated perhaps, but there's always doubt in absence of proof. IMO, the focus should instead be on hand extensions that RP might have used. And where's the elbow?
He couldn't have changed the camera position significantly in less than a second
See my vest, see my vest, made of real gorilla chest....Well, that just shows to go you that it wasn't a cheap gorilla suit. It came with a vest.

I agree, but you're referring to camera orientation, not position. In this case we know exactly how much change in orientation occurred between frames 61 and 72. Camera position is much more difficult to determine with only the film as a reference. But you're suggesting that a static object can change its appearance by being in different locations in a camera's field of view. This isn't the case. Unless an object is so close to the edge of the field of view that the lens aberrates the images, the images will be identical. The camera has to change position to change the POV. The motion of the camera itself would be distorting the images, more than any change in view. Do you think the finger bend is distortion?The camera moves all over the place in less than a second in several places during the film. You can probably do a 180 in a second.
Do you think the finger bend is distortion?
Because you stabilized it ...Here's an easier version of it to look at...the background doesn't jump around....
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Yes, at these distances we're at the edge of film resolution, or it could be motion of the camera, or a change in orientation of the hand, or the fingers are flexing, or the fingers are merely flexible. That's why a recreation might be informative.I think I can't tell what the noise is doing or showing. The subject is very small in the frame, and we are talking about objects near the resolution limit of the film.
It could be a hand flexing. I see no actual fingers. It could be just noise and light blobs causing the effect. I think the latter is the most likely, given all of the enhancing those frames have been through.
It's just too bad the hand didn't come out like those perfect piggy toes...
Snowshoe feet were used, which gave a height estimate of 9'.
Why is it skeptics fail to mention Dr. Meldrum exposed the hoax?