Showing posts with label The Legend of Boggy Creek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Legend of Boggy Creek. Show all posts

Thursday, February 5, 2026

The Legend Of Boggy Creek (1972)(Charles B. Pierce) - Retro Cinema Rewind!


Written By: Ken Hulsey

This weekend, I decided to revisit my DVD collection and watch my copy of "The Legend of Boggy Creek" after seeing the "Monster Quest" episode about the "Fouke Monster," also known as "The Swamp Stalker of Boggy Creek," earlier in the week.

During the Monster Quest episode, several scenes from Charles B. Pierce's film were shown, which motivated me to dust off my DVD and share it with my family. I’ve always considered the film a great scary movie, but after doing some research about it, I gained even more respect for Pierce and the work he created.

Sunday, December 2, 2018

The George Eastman Museum Has Restored "The Legend of Boggy Creek" And It's Coming To Blu-ray


From Newsweek

Hide your dog! Hide your pigs! The Fouke Monster is returning to theaters!

1972 Bigfoot horror movie The Legend of Boggy Creek is getting a 4K restoration, thanks to the efforts of director Charles B. Pierce’s daughter, Pamula Pierce Barcelou, who now holds the rights to the movie. The restoration, overseen by the George Eastman Museum, will return the movie to its original Techniscope glory after years of bad prints and cheapo DVDs.

Barcelou posted a preview video (thanks Bloody Disgusting!) that shows just how great the restoration looks. If you’ve seen Boggy Creek before, it’s probably obvious just how massive an improvement this is over past releases of the movie.



What’s not to love about that voiceover and the twangy, folk soundtrack? Even without the monster, Boggy Creek is a treat. The preview gives a good sense of the strange alchemy at play in the movie, with its combo of nature footage, personal accounts and recreated encounters worthy of Roger Patterson and Bob Gimlin, the two men who filmed the most famous supposedly “real” Bigfoot footage.

Boggy Creek interviews witnesses of the so-called “Fouke Monster,” a ten-foot ape creature that attacked livestock and stunk terribly. The mixture of fact and fiction, almost seamlessly combining scripted and genuine interviews with reenactments, gives The Legend of Boggy Creek an astounding verisimilitude. It’s obviously low-budget, but boy, does it feel real.

Sure, it has sequels (including one featured in a classic episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000), but The Legend of Boggy Creek is truly one-of-a-kind, pioneering the horror mockumentary a full eight years before Cannibal Holocaust. Pierce would refine his mockumentary style in 1976’s The Town that Dreaded Sundown.

The Legend of Boggy Creek isn’t exactly terrifying (it is, somehow, Rated G), though it lingers with you because it feels plausible. The accounts of the Fouke Monster haunting the swamp sound like real encounters, probably because some of them are! There are so few good Bigfoot movies, but The Legend of Boggy Creek would be a notable horror movie regardless, thanks to its eerie mix of exploitation shocks and documentary realism.

The Legend of Boggy Creek restoration will premiere June 14, 2019 at the Perot Theater in Texarkana, Texas, with a Blu-ray release to follow.

Reed my review of The Legend of Boggy Creek

Monday, February 11, 2013

Finding Bigfoot Starting A New Fouke Monster Frenzy

Source: KTBS Shreveport, LA

Is bigfoot in Southwest Arkansas? For decades, tourists have traveled to Fouke, Arkansas to find out for themselves.

After Highway 549 was built, community leaders were concerned whether or not visitors would still come.

However, the small community is still embracing the local legend and so are bigfoot enthusiasts.

Terita Friday grew up hearing all about the elusive creature.

She says Texarkana native Charles Pierce put Fouke on the map with his 1970's movie "The Legend of Boggy Creek."

Now a film crew from the Animal Planet's "Finding Bigfoot" has everyone talking again.

Brenda Roberts owns the Fouke Monster Store.

It's the only store in town with bigfoot souvenirs.

She says the legendary story is what keeps people coming to visit, even after traffic was detoured around the heart of town.

"They'll go out of their way on 549 to find us, we get alot of calls," said Roberts.

Bigfoot was first spotted in the Fouke area in the 1950's.

READ ARTICLE

Monday, November 21, 2011

Heavy Metal Meets Cryptozoology In Troglodyte's "Welcome To Boggy Creek"

Written By: Ken Hulsey
Source: Neandercore Music

It looks as if the Sasquatch movie craze has crossed over into music! Last week I posted an article featuring Kate Bush's new single "Wild Man" which is about the legendary Yeti, today however I can do you one better. The Kansas City, MO based band Troglodyte not only sing songs about Bigfoot but model their look after the monster as well. Their latest CD, entitled "Welcome To Boggy Creek" as an homage to Charles B. Pierces cult film "The Legend of Boggy Creek", features such tracks as "Symphonies of Sasquatch", "Mummified Yeti Hand", "Bring Me the Head of Bigfoot" and "Skunk Ape Rape."

If you ever wondered what Ministry would sound like with Sasquatch as a front man? ... well that kinda sums up Troglodyte.

Here is the bands bio from their Facebook page:

Formed in 2006, TROGLODYTE draws musical influences from the likes of CARCASS, OBITUARY and ORIGIN also finding inspiration from 70's drive-in horror fare such as THE LEGEND OF BOGGY CREEK, THE PIT and NIGHT OF THE DEMON. The band has craved/slashed out it's own niche as the world's first (and only) Bigfoot death-metal band.

Want to find out more? Visit - http://neandercore.com/ or http://www.facebook.com/troglodyteband

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

“The Legend of Boggy Creek” Director Charles B. Pierce Dead At Age 71

Written By: Ken Hulsey
Source: The New York Times

I know that everyone was shocked to learn this morning that the 38-year-old star of 'Lost Boys', Corey Haim, had died from a drug overdose, but I thought that all the monster movie fans out there should know that Charles B. Pierce also passed away last Friday.

Pierce will forever be remembered for 1972 movie, "The Legend of Boggy Creek", a film that recounted the chilling events that reportedly happened in rural Fouke, Arkansas in the early 1970s. As most of you know, the town has always been a hot spot for Bigfoot sightings, and Pierce's film documented a period of time when the monster went on a destructive rampage in and around Fouke.

To make his movie, Pierce borrowed $160,000 from a friend who owned a car dealership in Texarkana. The film maker used local residents to actually play themselves in the movie and used a man in an ape costume, which kinda looked like the Marvel comic book monster, Man-Thing, to play the 'Fouke Monster'. The film was a huge commercial success and raked in $25 million at the box office.

After "Boggy Creek", Pierce would go on to direct, “Bootleggers,” “The Town That Dreaded Sundown,” “Winterhawk,” “The Winds of Autumn,” “Grayeagle,” “The Norseman,” “The Evictors” and “Sacred Ground,” as well as “Boggy Creek II.”

Film maker Daniel Myrick notes that "Boggy Creek" was the main influence for his film, "The Blair Witch Project."

Pierce reportedly passed away in a nursing home in Dover, Tennessee, on Friday. The film maker was 71.


Pierce's family has not yet released the cause of death.

Update: I just added afew new, never before published, photos from "The Legend of Boggy Creek" to my review of the film.

See Also: The Legend Of Boggy Creek (1972)(Charles B. Pierce)

Monday, February 23, 2009

The Legend Of Boggy Creek (1972)(Charles B. Pierce)

UPDATE: “The Legend of Boggy Creek” Director Charles B. Pierce Dead At Age 71

Written By: Ken Hulsey

I was inspired to go into my DVD collection this weekend and pull out my copy of "The Legend of Boggy Creek" after I had watched the "Monster Quest" episode on the "Fouke Monster" or "The Swamp Stalker of Boggy Creek" as it was referred to on the program, earlier in the week.

Monster Quest showed several scenes from Charles B. Pierce's movie during the episode, so I dusted off my copy a put it the DVD player for the family to enjoy. I always thought of the film a great scary movie, but after I went and did some research about it, I gained even more respect for Pierce and the movie he created.

In 1972 Charles Pierce, an ad salesman from Texarkana, borrowed $160,000 from a friend who owned a car dealership, to make a movie about a local legend in Arkansas, that he had heard about growing up. Armed with a hand-held camera, and the local residents, who played themselves, Pierce set out to create a pseudo-documentary about recent encounters with a Bigfoot-like creature in and around the small town of Fouke.

Amazingly enough, Pierce, with no experience at making movies, was able to create a very believable and scary movie. His amateur actors, who obviously drew inspiration from their real-life encounters, display such fear, that the viewer really gets taken in by their raw emotion.



Pierce's camera work and editing really creates a genuine feeling of terror. His wisdom in only showing the monster from a distance, and in the shadows, adds to the mystery and the overall eerie feeling of the film.

It is amazing that an amateur film maker, like Pierce, was able to master so many truly scary film techniques in his first attempt at making a movie.


The movie starts out, documentary style, explaining the history of the town of Fouke, and its past run-ins with the monster.

There are several scenes that show the swamps around Boggy Creek. This really works well in setting the mood for the film, because the area is truly creepy looking. In fact I would dare anyone to find a scarier looking area in the United States.

As the film proceeds there are several reenactments of past encounters with the Bigfoot-like "Fouke Monster." Most of these are fairly benign, chance sightings by hunters mixed an occasional animal attack. Despite looking for a meal the monster stays hidden and avoids any human contact.

For the most part, the monster doesn't do anything to menace anyone.....well....that is until a young boy shoots it a couple of times. That's when the creature starts to view the residents of Fouke as adversaries.

Hunting parties are organized to try and kill the creature, but all they do is drive the beast away from the area for eight years.

It is at this point the Pierce makes his only error in producing the film. Two of the most awful country songs ever composed are added to stretch the length of the film. One is a ballad about how, "lonely", the monster is, and the second is about a local boy who likes to go camping and fishing in the swamp. These tunes sound like John Denver at his worst. I strongly recommend hitting "fast-forward" at this point.

Don't worry the film gets better after that.

When the monster returns, he returns with a vengeance. Animals once again begin to disappear and people begin to be attacked. It is obvious that the monster no longer has any fear of man.

A group of young High School girls are terrified when the monster interrupts their slumber party by rocking their mobile home and thrashing everything in sight.

The young ladies, again the actual victims, truly look terrified as they all try to load a shot-gun to protect themselves. Again another scene that was pulled off flawlessly by Pierce.

The film comes to a climax with the story of two young families that move into a house that is located near Boggy Creek together.

When the husbands go off to work the night shift, their wives are harassed by the monster, who tries to break into the house.

The next day, two visiting relatives discover giant tracks on the edge of the creek while fishing.

Later that night the creature returns and attacks one of the women by grabbing her through an open window. When the two men return from work, they find their families in a state of panic.

Armed with shot-guns, the men go out to find the monster. They mange to shot the creature several times. Believing that they have killed the beast they head for home. On the way back to the house one of the men is attacked by the creature, suffering several gashes and head trauma.

The family promptly rushes him to the hospital and moves out of the house the next morning.

Pierce's amateur monster movie would gross over $20 million at the box office. That may not seem like much compared to today's numbers, but to put it in perspective Fox's "Escape From The Planet Of The Apes" grossed only $12 million the year before.

In fact, the film was such a hit it spawned two sequels, "Return to Boggy Creek" in 1977 and "The Barbaric Beast of Boggy Creek, Part II". "Return" was not produced by Pierce and was a purely fictitious tale about a group of people who get lost in the swamp and are rescued by the monster. The film starred famed television actresses Dawn Wells (Gilligan's Island ) and Dana Plato (Diff'rent Strokes).

Whether you believe in Bigfoot or not, "The Legend of Boggy Creek" is a great scary movie. It may even make a skeptic think twice about the subject. Charles Pierce was able to create a truly iconic film, one that has been coveted by both monster movie fans and cryptozoolgy enthusiasts for decades.

Here are some never before published photos from "The Legend of Boggy Creek":






See Also: “The Legend of Boggy Creek” Director Charles B. Pierce Dead At Age 71