

The team includes Darryl Coleman (Rich McDonald), Robyn Conway (Ashley Wood) and Kevin Lancaster (Noah Weisberg). Though Reynolds is able to scrape together a hodgepodge group willing to give it a shot. His project is not “as” desirable to his coworkers who dread the idea of spending time out in the woods at potential harms way. This proof is highly desirable to filmmaker Reynolds (Drew Rausch) who thinks not only can he create an valuable TV show but also present the first real evidence to the world. The seed of the whole matter is a local woodsman by the name of Carl Drybeck (Frank Ashmore) who claims to have captured the dead body of “a” Big Foot and sealed it away from those who might come and confiscate it. The team has received a budget of which they hope to create a 12 show series. The routine is much the same with a documentary crew heading off with cameras in hand to capture “anything they can” in regards to Big Foot proof. This is all relative to the film I’m reviewing that bears the title “ The Lost Coast Tapes (2012)”. Still with all the technology, documentaries and researchers on hand, the mystery of the “Big Foot” has never been entirely debunked.

Though while me and my family find it entertaining, it’s also “usually” uneventful.
#The lost tapes trailer series
“Finding Bigfoot” is a TV series that has been showing on the “Animal Planet” network. So much perhaps that the casual TV viewer might not be able to discern between fact, fiction and film (at times). It seems like reality TV and fiction are crossing over all the time. After a “Bigfoot Hunter” claims to possess the body of a dead Sasquatch, a disgraced investigative journalist stakes his comeback - and the lives of his documentary film crew - on proving the find to be a hoax.
