The Legend of Boggy Creek VHS

$24.99
Only 204 available

SHIPPING IN Q1 2026

Terror Vision, in collaboration with Boggy Creek LLC, proudly presents the 1972 cult classic The Legend of Boggy Creek available on VHS.

The Legend of Boggy Creek is a docudrama-style horror tale rooted in the folklore of Fouke, Arkansas, where locals claim a mysterious, ape-like creature stalks the swamps and wooded backroads. Blending dramatized encounters with eyewitness testimony, the film follows a series of frightening sightings of the so-called “Fouke Monster,” a hulking, elusive figure said to prowl the region’s isolated bayous.

As residents recount their brushes with the beast—footprints found along riverbanks, nighttime attacks on rural homes, and eerie cries echoing through the marsh—the film paints a haunting portrait of a community living alongside a legend it can’t quite explain. Atmospheric, low-budget, and unusually earnest, The Legend of Boggy Creek helped cement the creature’s place in American cryptid lore and remains a foundational cult classic of regional horror filmmaking.

Charles B. Pierce was an independent filmmaker and Arkansas native who carved out a distinctive place in American cult cinema through his resourceful, regional approach to storytelling. He first broke through with The Legend of Boggy Creek (1972), a docudrama-style tale of local folklore that helped define the proto–found-footage genre. Pierce continued to build his reputation with atmospheric, Southern-rooted thrillers, most notably The Town That Dreaded Sundown (1976). Often serving as writer, director, cinematographer, and producer on his films, Pierce embodied the spirit of DIY filmmaking, leaving a lasting mark on both regional horror and American independent film.

Limited to 500 units

Featuring the original art from Ralph McQuarrie with a layout by Earl Kess.

SHIPPING IN Q1 2026

Terror Vision, in collaboration with Boggy Creek LLC, proudly presents the 1972 cult classic The Legend of Boggy Creek available on VHS.

The Legend of Boggy Creek is a docudrama-style horror tale rooted in the folklore of Fouke, Arkansas, where locals claim a mysterious, ape-like creature stalks the swamps and wooded backroads. Blending dramatized encounters with eyewitness testimony, the film follows a series of frightening sightings of the so-called “Fouke Monster,” a hulking, elusive figure said to prowl the region’s isolated bayous.

As residents recount their brushes with the beast—footprints found along riverbanks, nighttime attacks on rural homes, and eerie cries echoing through the marsh—the film paints a haunting portrait of a community living alongside a legend it can’t quite explain. Atmospheric, low-budget, and unusually earnest, The Legend of Boggy Creek helped cement the creature’s place in American cryptid lore and remains a foundational cult classic of regional horror filmmaking.

Charles B. Pierce was an independent filmmaker and Arkansas native who carved out a distinctive place in American cult cinema through his resourceful, regional approach to storytelling. He first broke through with The Legend of Boggy Creek (1972), a docudrama-style tale of local folklore that helped define the proto–found-footage genre. Pierce continued to build his reputation with atmospheric, Southern-rooted thrillers, most notably The Town That Dreaded Sundown (1976). Often serving as writer, director, cinematographer, and producer on his films, Pierce embodied the spirit of DIY filmmaking, leaving a lasting mark on both regional horror and American independent film.

Limited to 500 units

Featuring the original art from Ralph McQuarrie with a layout by Earl Kess.