The Dark Divide

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The Dark Divide
Film poster
Directed byTom Putnam
Written byTom Putnam
Based on
Where Bigfoot Walks: Crossing the Dark Divide
by
Produced byAaron Boyd
Ryan Frost
Tom Putnam
Jory Weitz
David Cross
StarringDavid Cross
Debra Messing
Distributed byStrike Back Studios
Release date
  • September 18, 2020 (2020-09-18)
Running time
107 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Dark Divide is a 2020 feature film based on the memoir Where Bigfoot Walks: Crossing the Dark Divide by Robert Michael Pyle.[1]

Pyle, a lepidopterist, sets out on a 30-day trek through the Gifford Pinchot National Forest to document butterflies and moths following his wife’s terminal ovarian cancer diagnosis. An inexperienced hiker, Pyle encounters challenges including frightening wildlife and getting lost in a cave. When he completes the hike, taking far more days than he had expected to, he leaves the wilderness with a sense of accomplishment.

Production

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The movie was filmed almost entirely on location in the places the action was set. Director Tom Putnam credited his background as a documentary film director for making this feasible. He said, "Because of my documentary background, we were able to construct a film that used a small crew to reach locations larger films could never go to...If you see David [Cross] hanging off a cliff, braving a thunderstorm, or struggling in freezing water, that's really him. When you see lava tunnels deep underground, that's where we shot."[2]

Release

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The film was released virtually on September 18, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] The film's website noted that some of the film's proceeds would be donated to "protect wildlife and wild places."[3]

Reception

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Writing for The Hollywood Reporter, critic Frank Scheck called the film "awfully entertaining" and praised Cross's "touching and funnily self-effacing turn."[1] The Austin Chronicle's Richard Whittaker praised the film as "a beautiful, quiet, lyrical, funny wilderness trip, a meditation on loss and picking up the pieces, and the most perfectly poignant performance of David Cross' acting career."[4]

References

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