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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars B-Movie about Bigfoot's cousin down in the Louisiana bayou
"Creature From Black Lake" (a.k.a. "Demon of the Lake") is one of a string of "Bigfoot" inspired low-budget horror flicks made in the Seventies. This when is set down in the Louisiana bayou country where a couple of anthropology students from Chicago named Rives (Dennis Fimple) and Pahoo (John David Carson) show up to search for the local...
Published on March 2, 2003 by Lawrance M. Bernabo

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good!!! BUT, it's no Boggy Creek!
I obtained this for Christmas, I had heard both Good and Bad things about this movie. This is nothing like The "Legend of Boggy Creek". It takes place in the swamps of loisiana where two college boys are a looking Bigfoot. The encounter many witnesses, as well as the town Sheiff who wants them to keep thier mouthes shut about the creature. This movie has it's ups and...
Published on February 2, 2005 by LegendDraco


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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars B-Movie about Bigfoot's cousin down in the Louisiana bayou, March 2, 2003
"Creature From Black Lake" (a.k.a. "Demon of the Lake") is one of a string of "Bigfoot" inspired low-budget horror flicks made in the Seventies. This when is set down in the Louisiana bayou country where a couple of anthropology students from Chicago named Rives (Dennis Fimple) and Pahoo (John David Carson) show up to search for the local creature (their professor thought this would be a good idea). The boys immediately get on the bad side of the local Sheriff (Billy Thurman) whose name is, I swear, Billy Carter (the film came out in 1976, which is the year Jimmy Carter was elected but still before the "Billy Beer" period of his time in the White House). Things get worse when the young students find a couple of local gals to have some fun with; of course, one of them turns out to be the sheriff's daughter. Meanwhile, all the older folks in town keep muttering things about the creature. This explains why the "stars" of this film are the veteran character actors Jack Elam as Joe Canton and Dub Taylor as Grandpa Bridges. Eventually the guys wander off into the wood and darn if they do not meet up with a creature out in the Black Lake area.

As you might suspect, this a film where the chills come from strange noises in the woods, because once the creature actually shows up there is going to come a point where we get a good look at it and the bubble is going to burst. Fortunately it is a brief look and does not do too much harm to the climax. "Creature From Black Lake" does get points for capturing local color, since it was filmed in Louisiana, which just means the locals playing the locals add some authenticity to the film. The hand-held camera approach works in the film's favor as well. Elam and Taylor have fun playing those crazy old coots that kept them employed for several decades (Elam wants to get his shotgun and turn the creature into a rug), always threatening to take the film over the top, but that is to be expected. In terms of Bigfoot movies "Creature From Black Lake" is not as good as "Legend of Boggy Creek," but maybe a bit better than "Sasquatch." Depends on how much you like movies where the creature is out there, just beyond the light of your campfire. Overall, not a bad little Seventies B-movie for this genre. Note: director Joy N. Houck Jr. plays Professor Burch.

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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Classic Drive In Flick, February 1, 2003
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This review is from: Creature from Black Lake (DVD)
I first reviewed this great drive in flick over in the VHS section (review titled "Late Show Movie Classic"). Since that time I was very surprised to see it come to the DVD format. Unfortunately the quality is substandard to say the least. Horrible streaking & scratches, a pinhole of light on the righthand side of the print, pitiful color saturation...just like my old beat up VHS copy. My only concession is that being on DVD, it should last indefinitely unlike my old VHS tape. As for the movie, my old review still stands. Lots of fun, uniformly good acting (for this type of picture), great music & sound effects add to the chills, excellent cinematography by the great Dean Cundey (of "Halloween I, II, III", "The Fog", "Escape From New York", "Romancing The Stone", "Back To The Future II, III", "Jurassic Park", "Apollo 13", "Big Trouble In Little China" fame), tons of back water swamp atmosphere, genuine scares, a clever twist ending, and of course...the old "guy in a chintzy bigfoot costume". There's no high tech effects or gore & it's fairly slow paced, but it has a genuine charm & it outshines 95% of the other horror dreck that is out now-a-days. Old timers Jack Elam & Dub Taylor chew up the scenery while John David Carson & Dennis Fimple yuck it up as the two college guys who track the beast. The DVD back boxcover mistakenly identifies John David Carson as "Pahoo" (one of moviedom's all time classic character names) & Dennis Fimple as "Reeves" while in fact, it is the other way around. So that shows you the poor care Sterling Entertainment exhibited in making this DVD. They tout "Guaranteed Superior Quality" on the boxcover... I know it's just a low budget horror flick that they figure nobody will care about so they just throw something against the wall to see what sticks & sell a few copies. But come on, you can't even get the facts correct on the boxcover, let alone getting a better print to master from? I'm sure the original film makers have a decent print but I'm sure Sterling doesn't want to have to pay them their due but using their materials. As for the extras...they are worthless as well. So unfortunately, a shoddy piece of junk quality wise, but it's no worse than my VHS copy. So, enjoy the flick & try to excuse the poor quality. Make sure you watch for Pahoo's 70's-style jersey that sports his name on the back! Classic. I love this movie but I wish they'd have taken a bit more care in the quality department. I docked the film one star for this unfortunate sorry print they used to master. It kind of adds to the 70's drive in feel none the less. Thanks to the creators Joy Houck & Jim McCullough for all the years of enjoyment I've gotten from this scary, campy & funny flick! The DVD is a welcome addition to my "Creature" poster & lobby card set despite the poor hackjob Sterling did in mastering the DVD. Thanks to Amazon for offering yet another great "lost find" to their growing list of offbeat films & stuff you'd never find at your local stores. Bravo!
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Hairy Situation, January 10, 2005
By 
William R. Hancock (Travelers Rest, S.C. United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Creature from Black Lake (DVD)
After having acquired the DVD version of "The Legend of Boggy Creek", a movie I enjoyed "way back when" (and find I still do), I noticed a lot of media association between it and this film, "The Creature From Black Lake". I also noticed "Black Lake" starred Jack Elam and Dub Taylor , two of the greatest character actors who ever worked in the film business . These connections made me purchase this movie.
I am not sorry I did. Is this the be-all-and-end-all of scary movie making? No, it isn't. Is it a "dud", a "stinker", a waste of money and viewing time. No, it isn't THAT either!!! It is a "B" picture, what used to be called a "Drive-In Flick" and an entertaining one at that.
It was obviously inspired by "Boggy Creek". It begins with
the same kind of spooky photographic tour of creepy, desolate swamplands (both movies have turtles jumping off logs into the water). These are the opening credits sequences, alive with the
sounds of croaking bullfrogs and screeching waterfowl. VERY "Boggy Creek". Add to that the musical score , which was composed by the same composer who DID "Boggy Creek", Jaime Mendoza-Nava, and you get a very similar "feel" with the material.
The difference in the two films is that "Boggy" is re-created , basically non-fictional docu-drama, whereas "Black Lake" is fiction based on alledged anecdotal fact. "Lake" uses no narration, as "Boggy" does, and moves along as a typical "booger" movie except for the fact that it really doesn't become truly frightening until close to the end.

Jim McCullough and Joy Houck, Jr., the producer and director, respectively, have taken a cue from some classic old time movie directors like Val Lewton and learned that an audience has more empathy for characters in danger if they feel they KNOW these characters and have "bonded" with them, than if they are just "faces" to be stalked and slaughtered. The old masters knew you got more audience involvement, feelingwise, if ONE character you "knew" and "liked" was being terrorised upstairs in a house by a maniac than if 1,273 anonymous running individuals got stomped by Godzilla. That's how human psychology works.

In this movie you are introduced to a gaggle of pretty likeable characters early on; two University of Chicago cryptozoology students (Dennis Fimple and John David Carson), a cranky local sheriff with little time or patience with monster foolishness, cute eye-candy girls and colorful locals...some of whom have SEEN the "booger". A great deal of the movie is likeably amusing, somewhat comical, only mildly frightening. This is the "set up" part of the film, the part which engages you with the characters. It comprises about the first 80% of the movie. Then "Black Lake" takes a sharp turn into frightfulness and becomes quite brutal and nerve-wracking. It turns into the scary thing the promos claimed it was, and it does so very effectively. The mechanical and make-up effects are quite good for a low budget effort and the acting is decent all the way around. Elam and Taylor, of course, are superb, but Fimple and Carson as the students are good in their roles as well. The only quibble I have with Fimple's character, "Pahoo", is that he is supposed to be a Vietnam vet and he comes closer to depicting a beardless "Shaggy Rogers" without a Scooby Doo. The sense of weaponscraft and camp security a real such ex-warrior would realistically possess are just not there. The two young leads are told this is a vicious killing thing, but they go after it with only one weapon and at a crucial plot turn it is found to be not loaded. They "forgot". A typical Hollywood plot device...utterly unbelievable...that serves no purpose than to set up a dangerous confrontation that puts the principals in jeopardy.

Despite some plot holes like this (which almost ALL "B" pictures are encumbered with) "Black Lake" moves along pretty darn well and ultimately satisfies. I think some reviewers want high-tension, blood-and-guts savagery thoughout the movie (like "Jason" or "The Creeper" might provide them) and this one isn't structured that way. Taken as a whole, though, it is a nice little "old school" chiller that is well worth watching.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good!!! BUT, it's no Boggy Creek!, February 2, 2005
This review is from: Creature from Black Lake (DVD)
I obtained this for Christmas, I had heard both Good and Bad things about this movie. This is nothing like The "Legend of Boggy Creek". It takes place in the swamps of loisiana where two college boys are a looking Bigfoot. The encounter many witnesses, as well as the town Sheiff who wants them to keep thier mouthes shut about the creature. This movie has it's ups and downs, there is not as much creature action in here as Boggy Creek. We actually get to see the creature up close, but note this truly depicts Sasquatch poorly.

As a massive fan of the mystery I feel that I should stick up for the big guy. NEVER, AND I MEAN NEVER, has there been any attack on a human, the creature in here is blood thirsty and likes to kill. Not like the gentle giants that they are, and yes I am a believer. This movie has a whole lot of suspense in it and keeps you on the edge of your seat. If your a Bigfoot fan such as myself I would see it. Be fore warned that it is no Boggy Creek however.



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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars FUN TO WATCH BEFORE GOING CAMPING, June 12, 2003
By 
J. W. Coleman "OmensAuthor" (Port Orchard, WA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Creature from Black Lake (DVD)
I first saw this movie on a rented VHS tape back in the early 80's, and fell in love with it. I kept a copy of this movie through the years and watched it probably 50 or 60 times. It's an excellent - though low budget, sometimes campy and sometimes boring - yarn about a search for the elusive Bigfoot. The comedy comes from the acting, which leaves a lot to be desired. But overall, this is an excellent "good time" campy B-rated movie that has brought me much joy throughout the years, and will likely continue to do so long into the future.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Bigfoot Movie Ever Made, August 30, 2003
By 
Travis D. Mchenry (Eastern United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Creature from Black Lake (DVD)
The subject line says it all! Scary and well-paced, Creature From Black Lake is a movie that entertains all the way. This DVD version has about five minutes of photage that was cut from the original video, and it adds more than you'd think. Also, the picture is much clearer than the video, making it more enjoyable. I had the pleasure of being contacted by the producer Jim McCullough recently, and we discussed the possibility of a sequel in the future using many of the same actors.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Creature, April 23, 2003
By 
Ned "java_ned" (Eldersburg, Maryland United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Creature from Black Lake (DVD)
The story is about a couple of college students that travel to Louisiana in search of a mysterious creature. Once they arrive they have a run in with the sheriff once they mention they are looking for this creature. They wind up at one of the local's homes and the granddad tells how his grandson's parents were killed after seeing the creature (told in flashbacks). While camping they come face-to-face with the creature.

The movie is not that bad; it has Jack Elam and a couple of good scares.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Buried Treasure, January 24, 2004
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This review is from: Creature from Black Lake (DVD)
This is a fun little movie that entertains.
It is a fast paced and actually quite humorous in some parts.
The two main characters have a really good chemistry and work well together. The final scene surprisingly gets pretty creepy and has a great atmosphere to it.
I would recommend it to anyone who enjoys the Bigfoot genre, independent horror or 1970's cheese.
This is probably the best Bigfoot movie ever made and it is suitable for all ages.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great value!, August 13, 2003
By 
shacary "Shacary" (Illinois United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Creature from Black Lake (DVD)
this is actually a horror movie the kids could watch! I laughed at some of the costumes and the " good old boy mentality" of the presentation, but the story-line was done well. the actors, mostly unknowns did a fine job of the material they had.
All in all, not a thinking person's movie , but entertaining none the less.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Any Movie About Bigfoot Made In Louisiana With Dub Taylor, Jack Elam, And A Sheriff Named Billy Carter Has Got To Be Great!, August 18, 2010
This review is from: Creature from Black Lake (DVD)
"Creature From Black Lake" was released in 1976, just in time to cash in on the "Boggy Creek" and general bigfoot mania. This film is a hilarious example of B-movie fare, and has a lot to recommend it to people who love drive-ins and the ludicrous bargain basement films they used to show. I knew when I saw the opening credits roll that this was going to be a classic of the genre (starring Dennis Fimple and John David Carson, and featuring other luminaries such as Jack Elam, Dub Taylor, and Roger Pancake,) and I have never been more right. This is a classic of B-movie filmmaking, guaranteed to make any fan laugh and roll their eyes alternately.

The film opens (allegedly) at the University of Chicago, which is a very prestigious school. Here it looks amazingly like a junior high school, and the anthropology class on bigfoot is pretentious yet funny. Two college students of advanced age, Pahoo (Fimple...I love this character name so much,) and Reeves (Carson) are so convinced of the existence of bigfoot that they con their professor into giving them a terrible old van and some money to take a field trip to Arkansas and Louisiana to find proof of bigfoot. Immediately thereafter, we are introduced to one of the major motifs of the film: driving. They drive all over the place, and the Director, Joy N. Houck Jr., doesn't let us miss a moment of the excitement as they drive from Illinois to Louisiana.

Eventually they make it to the small town of interest, and Sheriff Billy Carter (Bill Thurman) immediately makes it clear to the boys that they are not to investigate Sasquatch in his town, and they are definitely not to become involved with his daughter, Becky (Becky Smiser) and her friend Michelle (Michelle Willingham,) which they, of course, do. I can't blame them: I didn't care anything about this movie until Becky showed up, but her appearance made it all worthwhile. I also find it ironically amusing that the Sheriff's character name was Billy Carter. Bearing in mind that this was released in the spring on 1976 and the ghastly horror of the Carter administration with all the spectacular foibles of the real Billy Carter was mere months in the future, I couldn't help but draw amusing parallels. The characters of the two men are somewhat similar, only the Sheriff in the movie is vastly more cultured, erudite, and intellectual than the President's brother was.

Pahoo and Reeves start talking to locals, and quickly work their way to Grandpa Bridges' (Dub Taylor) house, where he tells them about the creature in exchange for cash. Before it's over you get to see Dub, first topless, and later in pajamas, and he even brandishes a harmonica and sings! How could this movie possibly get better? (At least in this film he chose not to wear an "Ex-Lax" shirt, which is, sadly, not always the case with Dub.) When the taboo subject of the creature comes up over a heap o' vittles, Grandma Bridges gets the vapors, provoking Dub's wrath. This scene is likely the worst-acted in the film, and is one of the worst performances in any movie ever. Despite Dub's displeasure and the no end of emoting he does, he does rescue the boys from his barn when they are attacked by the creature, who turns out to be less frightening than most of the locals. I cannot overemphasize how cheesy this mangy skunk ape is.

The boys go camping and invite the girls, resulting in a bad case of Sheriff interruptus. Billy Carter jails the boys, and subsequently also jails drunk old Joe Canton (Jack Elam,) who has the most evocative phlegm-clearing scene in movie history and is the man they wanted to speak with anyway! What are the chances? Jack tells them to come out to his home in the swamp. After they are released they do so, and he tells them where to find the creature. They go camp in the yeti's lair, and much hokey drama ensues. There's a pointless subplot about Vietnam, there's a hilarious scene where bigfoot plunders a tent, there's a shooting, a stabbing, and eventually a meeting of the minds between Billy Carter, Pahoo, and Reeves, but only after the horrifying creature rolls the awful van down an embankment and sets it on fire. The ending is as ridiculous as anything you have likely ever seen, and I won't spoil it for you, it's just too delicious.

The DVD comes with extras: some very brief production notes and star biographies. Humorously enough, Elam and Taylor got biographies (and deserve them, no doubt,) but the stars, Fimple and Carson, get nary a mention. This is a patently ridiculous movie, but if you are amused by B-movies from decades past, this is hard to beat.
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