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The Legend of Boggy Creek Poster

The Legend of Boggy Creek

A True Story.
1972 | 87m | English

(3909 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 0.6 (history)

Director: Charles B. Pierce
Writer: Earl E. Smith
Staring:
Details

A documentary-style drama based on true accounts of the Fouke Monster in Arkansas.
Release Date: Aug 01, 1972
Director: Charles B. Pierce
Writer: Earl E. Smith
Genres: Adventure, Horror, Mystery, Thriller
Keywords bigfoot, swamp, arkansas, based on true story, monsters of the wild, cryptozoology, mockumentary, docudrama, swamp monster, fake documentary, found footage, southern sasquatch, fouke monster, sasquatch, pseudo-documentary
Production Companies P & L
Box Office Revenue: $22,000,000
Budget: $160,000
Updates Updated: Jul 30, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Vern Stierman Narrator
Chuck Pierce Jr. Jim as Boy
William Stumpp Jim as Adult
Willie E. Smith Willie
Lloyd Bowen Himself
Jeff Crabtree Fred Crabtree
Glenn Carruth Bobby Ford
Bunny Dees Mrs. Ford
John Wallis Mr. Ford
Sarah Coble Mrs. Turner
Travis Crabtree Himself
Smokey Crabtree Himself
Robin Raffaell Trailer Incident
Cathy Cox Trailer Incident
Jinger Hawkins Trailer Incident
Steve Lyons Teen-age Couple
John P. Hixon Self
John W. Oates Self
B.R. Barrington Self
Buddy Crabtree James Crabtree
Judy Haltom Mary Beth Searcy
Mary B. Johnson Sister
Louise Searcy Self
Dina Louise Savell Baby
Phillip Bradley Teen-age Hunter
Bill Hunt Hunter
Monroe E. Smith Hunter
Eddie J. Dalmes Hunter
James E. Cobb Hunter
William Wright Hunter
Eddy Berdig Hunter
Jerry Chapman Hunter
Rickey Ashley Hunter
Dave R. Templeton Hunter
John Knight Jr. Hunter
Dudley Pickens Hunter
James Cornell Hunter
Gene Ross Hunter
Herb Jones Self
Patty Dougan Teen-age Couple
Dennis Lamb Mr. Kennedy
Loraine Lamb Mrs. Kennedy
George Dobson George
Dave Ball Dave
Jim Nicklus Jim
Flo Pierce Bessie Smith
Thomas Templeton Hunter
Pamula Pierce Child
Tammy Harper Child
Bobby Splawn Child
Charles Walraven Self
Robin Raffaelli Trailer Incident
Dave O'Brien Mr. Turner
Billy Crawford Corky Hill
James Tennison Landlord
Ernest Walraven Self
Amanda Pierce Little Girl
Aaron Ball Baby
Ken McElroy Doctor
Sarah Brewers Nurse
Glenda Page Nurse
Name Job
Charles B. Pierce Director of Photography, Director
Earl E. Smith Screenplay
Jaime Mendoza-Nava Original Music Composer
Tom Boutross Editor
John Ball Art Direction
Jack Bennett Special Effects
Billy Peck Sound
David Musseimer Sound
John Knight Jr. Gaffer
Ramp Boyd Gaffer
Travis Crabtree Key Grip
John Post Sound Effects Editor
Heather Holden Sound Effects Editor
Jack C. May Sound Effects Editor
Name Title
Charles B. Pierce Producer
Earl E. Smith Associate Producer
L.W. Ledwell Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 8 11 5
2024 5 8 14 5
2024 6 6 10 4
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2025 1 6 11 4
2025 2 5 8 2
2025 3 4 7 2
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2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 1 0
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2025 10 2 3 0

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Reviews

Wuchak
5.0

_**The Bigfoot of southwest Arkansas**_ "The Legend of Boggy Creek" (1972) is docudrama with horror elements about the supposedly true sightings of the Fouke Monster, a three-toed Sasquatch-like creature that was seen in the Fouke region of southwest Arkansas from the 40s onward. Several locals r ... ecount their stories, often played by themselves. The modest film only cost $100,000, but unexpectedly became the 10th highest-grossing movie of 1972, raking in a whopping $20 million at the box office and another $4.8 million in 1975 with a North American rerelease. It was director Charles B. Pierce’s breakthrough. He went on to do respectable B-flicks like “The Town That Dreaded Sundown” (1976), which addressed the real-life Texarkana Moonlight Murders of 1946, and “Grayeagle” (1977), a colorful Western that took “The Searchers” plot and made a more entertaining movie. He later did a sequel to this film in 1984 called “Boggy Creek II: And the Legend Continues.” There are also a couple of unofficial sequels made by different directors which eschew the docudrama approach: “Return to Boggy Creek” (1977) and “Boggy Creek,” aka “Boggy Creek: The Legend Is True” (2011). In addition, there’s a documentary about various skunkape encounters in the Midwest called “The Legacy of Boggy Creek” (2011). Obviously something about this film clicked with audiences back in its day. It features some nice nature photography with a spooky bent, a (wisely) vague creature, some quaint narrations and a few old-fashioned folk songs. Some people find it effectively creepy in an understated way while others find it so dull it’s worthless. I’m in the middle. I can enjoy it for what it is and respect its notable history, but it’s also admittedly tedious. It would play better to modern viewers if the runtime was cut in half. The film runs 1 hour, 26 minutes, and was shot in the Fouke, Arkansas, region. GRADE: C

Jun 23, 2021