AI Analysis of Harley Hoffman Bigfoot Footage Reveals Non-Human Proportions
Posted Wednesday, June 24, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
There's a video circulating right now that deserves a closer look from anyone serious about Sasquatch research. It's a deep dive into one of the most compelling pieces of footage ever captured, and the analysis goes way beyond the usual "blurry Bigfoot" debate. The footage in question is the Harley Hoffman video from 2001, filmed somewhere in the rugged southwest region of British Columbia's Lower Mainland. What makes this particular breakdown stand out is how thoroughly it examines the anatomical details that most people overlook when watching the clip.
The footage itself shows a massive bipedal hominid moving through dense underbrush with a fluidity and strength that seems almost impossible for a human actor in a costume. The figure takes several steps across what appears to be a slope or clearing before disappearing from view. It's short, handheld, and exactly the kind of raw, unpolished recording that makes Sasquatch footage so frustrating and fascinating at the same time.
What really caught my attention in this analysis was the focus on muscle movement. The video points out that you can actually see defined deltoids, triceps, and even the contour of the back and spinal structure beneath the fur. There are frames where soft tissue movement is visible in the thighs and glutes during the stride. The narrator brings up a quote from Bill Munns, a veteran Hollywood creature and costume designer, who has stated that convincing muscle movement is something that even modern costume technology cannot properly replicate. When the musculature is sculpted into a costume, it simply doesn't move the way real muscle does. That's a pretty significant point coming from someone who actually builds these things for a living.
The fur texture is another detail worth paying attention to. The analysis describes natural shading, clumping, and a subtle sheen that shifts as the figure moves. Combined with how light interacts with the coat, it creates the impression of real volume and depth rather than a synthetic material. Anyone who's ever watched a costume up close knows that fake fur tends to move uniformly and lacks that layered, organic quality.
Then there's the AI proportion analysis, which was a fascinating addition. The narrator ran the footage through ChatGPT to get measurements, and the numbers are striking. The shoulder width to torso height ratio came out to approximately 0.71, compared to the typical human range of 0.25 to 0.30. The arm length to torso ratio was 0.58 versus the human average of 0.45 to 0.50. Even accounting for foliage obstruction and the fact that the lower arm is hidden, these proportions clearly exceed anything human. The shoulder width alone represents nearly three-quarters of the torso height, which is significantly more massive than any human build. And the full arm measurement from shoulder to wrist would likely show an even greater disparity.
The posture and limb placement also suggest a large hominid with broad shoulders and arms that hang noticeably lower than a human's would. The movement through exceptionally dense, difficult terrain speaks to natural athleticism and strength that would be incredibly hard to replicate, especially in a bulky costume on uneven forest ground.
One of the most interesting parts of the video addresses the criticisms head-on. Skeptics often point to what appears to be a sagging thigh, suggesting a normal-sized man wearing an oversized ape costume. But when you pause the footage at the right moment and understand the context of that frame, it becomes clear that what you're actually seeing is the creature's arm swinging down in front of its thigh as it takes a large stride forward. It creates the illusion of a sagging leg, but it's simply the left arm in motion. That's the kind of detail that separates casual dismissal from actual analysis.
The lack of visible seams, zippers, or filling marks is another point in favor of authenticity. Given the strong contrast between the figure and the background, any costume imperfections should be obvious if they existed. The fact that none are visible, combined with the smooth gait, the muscle and soft tissue movement, and the unaltered nature of a simple handheld video camera recording from 2001, all point toward a real, organic subject.
The backstory of the Hoffman brothers adds another layer of intrigue to this whole thing. Harley and Hatch Hoffman apparently came from a family of explorers, and both were accustomed to the wilderness from a young age. Hatch uploaded the footage online with the title "Real Bigfoot Video Exclusive," and it quickly gained traction on blogs and forums as one of the best Sasquatch clips since the Patterson-Gimlin film. But the story gets stranger from there, with the brothers holding some unusual beliefs and eventually becoming divided over the footage and related matters. The video touches on everything from Bigfoot to Santa Claus, from wild enthusiasm to tragedy, painting a picture of two men whose lives became intertwined with something far bigger than a simple video upload.
What's particularly frustrating about this case is that the original raw files, photographs, EXIF data, and even a location map were never shared. That leaves a lot of questions unanswered, but it doesn't diminish what's visible in the footage itself.
This is the kind of analysis that rewards careful viewing. The details about proportion, muscle movement, and fur texture are things that require slowing down and really looking at the footage frame by frame. Anyone interested in Sasquatch evidence should definitely check out this video and see what conclusions they draw for themselves. The more eyes on this footage, the better.