I Am Big Bird, dir. Dave LaMattina, Chad N. Walker, wr. Dave LaMattina, st. Caroll Spinney, Frank Oz, Jim Henson
You’ve
probably seen Caroll Spinney’s body
of work even if you aren’t too sure what he looks like, for Caroll Spinney is
Big Bird, Sesame Street’s most lovable (pre-Elmo, that is) character, and
indeed has been since 1969. That’s a long time to be encased in that
yellow-feathered suit, but Dave
LaMattina and Chad N. Walker’s
film makes light, efficient work of his lengthy career. I Am Big Bird comprises the usual talking heads of those who new
him best, family and friends, collaborators and acquaintances, providing us
with a whistle-stop tour of the Sesame Street back-lot and emerging 70’s studio
politics But this is strictly documenting-by-numbers, with the directors
employing a super-saccharine score by Joshua
Johnson that signposts every emotional beat with all the subtlety of a
head-butt to the nuts. It’s a great shame too, as Spinney himself comes off as
a man far more complex than the film gives him credit for. Low points in his
career such as his acute depression, or a peculiarly crowbarred in episode that
concerns a murder that took place on Spinney’s land, remain oddly unfinished
and unexplored as if the producers can’t wait to bring in the strings and let
things soar again towards another prefab emotional uplift. There’s heaps of
nostalgia to be found though, and the archive footage is genuinely of interest.
Like Big Bird himself though, this never quite manages to take flight.