
Jim and his girlfriend Kelly are visiting the infamous Willow Creek, the alleged home of the original Bigfoot legend - the tale of huge ape like creatures that roam the forests of North America. It was there that in 1967, the legendary beast was captured on film and has terrified and mystified generations since. Keen to explore more than 50 years of truth, folklore, misidentifications and hoaxes, Kelly goes along for the ride to keep Jim happy, whilst he is determined to prov... (Full plot summary below)
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Jim and his girlfriend Kelly are visiting the infamous Willow Creek, the alleged home of the original Bigfoot legend - the tale of huge ape like creatures that roam the forests of North America. It was there that in 1967, the legendary beast was captured on film and has terrified and mystified generations since. Keen to explore more than 50 years of truth, folklore, misidentifications and hoaxes, Kelly goes along for the ride to keep Jim happy, whilst he is determined to prove the story is real by capturing the beast on camera. Deep in the dark and silent woods, isolated and hours from human contact, neither Kelly or Jim are prepared for what is hidden between the trees, and what happens when the cameras start rolling...
Leave your thoughts about Willow Creek.
| Village VoiceAlan ScherstuhlThe horror's a long time coming, but Goldthwait and company make the waiting worth it. |
| Cinema CrazedFelix Vasquez Jr.A wonderful turn of the found footage sub-genre that watches like a part found footage movie, and part documentary shoot that took a turn in to hell. |
| Independent (UK)Geoffrey MacnabWillow Creek is yet another found-footage horror film but it's a fresh and engaging one, combining tongue-in-cheek humour with some genuinely creepy moments. |
| QuickflixSimon MiraudoIt's damn good. Believe it... [Willow Creek is] a break-up movie, really; just one in which a mysterious monster assists in the breaking. |
| SFX MagazineNick SetchfieldIf the waking scream of an ending doesn't shred your ganglia you may have no functioning nervous system. |
| The ListMatt GlasbyThough it feels improvised, this is a well-honed work, with details laughed off in the daylight becoming spookily significant once darkness falls. |
| Total FilmJamie GrahamWillow Creek's terror tactics are all about what you don't see, while the source of the chills is kept ambiguous: over-active imagination, pissed-off locals or honest-to-God beastie? |
| Reel Film ReviewsDavid Nusair...an above-average entry within the mostly worthless found-footage arena... |
| Hollywood & FineMarshall FineThe final 20 minutes of the film prove once again that what you can't see is infinitely more frightening than what you can..leaves you goosey and tense. |
| HollywoodInToto.comChristian TotoWillow Creek is the best found footage shocker in ages, a statement that speaks volumes about the floundering genre. |