Blood Beast of Monster Mountain (1975) Poster

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Essentially the same movie as "Legend Of Blood Mountain"
Schlockmeister19 September 2002
This is, essentially, the same movie as "Legend Of Blood Mountain". A new producer bought the rights to this movie, added some new footage of the monster and some gore to please 1970s audiences, and re-released it 10 years after the fact.

It's a real shame that, because of this movie's history, it is almost impossible to find it in it's original form. "Demon Hunter" is a badly spliced mess, and this has added footage and a new monster.

Okay, "Legend Of Blood Mountain" is never going to rank on anyone's list of best movie, but still, it would be nice if the original were available more widely.
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2/10
Blood Mountain started bleeding again... Yeah, if only!
Coventry22 November 2021
"The Legend of McCullough's Mountain", a.k.a "Monster Mountain" is a genuine collector's item, ...as long as it remains unseen in the box! Probably only cult-movie collectors will understand the above statement, and the sentiment I'm about to describe. They undoubtedly know the feeling, when snooping around on a flea-market or in the basement of a former video store gone bankrupt, of suddenly stumbling on a dusty old VHS-tape of a movie that is extremely obscure and totally unknown to the rest of the world. You're ecstatic, because very few people will have a copy of the film in question in their cupboard. But, at the same time and somewhere deep inside, you also realize the actual film will be terrible. After all, most obscure movies are obscure for a good reason.

This 70s flick apparently is the same as a 60s flick called "The Legend of Blood Mountain", but with extra footage added. Well, whatever footage they added, it surely didn't make the film any better or more interesting. It's a dreadfully dull pseudo-documentary about a godforsaken mountain community in redneck-Georgia, where every couple of full moons a Bigfoot-creature is spotted and linked to unresolved disappearances. The clumsy wannabe journalist Bestoink Dooley sees the urban legend as his big breakthrough nationwide, and travels to Georgia to cover the story. George Ellis, the actor/comedian depicting Bestoink (what kind of name is that, anyway?) is a sort of fusion between Lou Costello, Oliver Hardy and Marty Feldman, but he lacks the talent and the charisma of any of them. Don't get your hopes up on seeing much monster footage, neither. I've seen my share of lousy Sasquatch movies (remember "The Legend of Boggy Creek", "Sasqua", "Night of the Demon") but this one takes the cake.
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8/10
An amusingly goofy Bigfoot romp
Woodyanders20 August 2007
Warning: Spoilers
This refreshingly playful and tongue-in-cheek romp is part fact, part fiction and all enjoyable in its pleasingly facetious telling of a legendary backwoods Bigfoot who periodically pops up in the Georgia forest around an equally mythical mountain to scare the hell out of the local yokels. Klutzy middle-aged newspaper copy boy Bestoink Dooley (winningly played by George Ellis), eager to nail a hot scoop, goes venturing up into the hills to find out if the stories about Mr. Out of Control Excess Body Hair have any basis in truth.

Director Massey Cramer displays a light, frothy touch throughout (Cramer co-wrote and produced the merely okay dope deal opus "The Florida Connection"). Joseph Shelton's sometimes sharp cinematography offers some eye-catching visuals of the eerily calm lakes and woods, plus several creepy shots of the creature prowling around the dense, fog-shrouded forest. A spooky atmosphere is effectively developed and the monster attack scenes are executed with a goodly amount of punch. Former yo-yo champion, spookshow performer, soft-core writer/director/producer and all-around extraordinary cinematic jack-of-all-trades exploitation huckster par excellence Donn Davison (who's billed here as a "world traveler, lecturer, and psychic investigator") clearly shot inserts for this little killer-diller; they were probably done for a belated 70's release in order to cash in on the then scorching hot Sasquatch craze. Davison makes for a wryly entertaining host as he cites facts about Bigfoot which include the famous Teddy Roosevelt incident and conducts droll interviews with wide-eyed folks who've had scary run-ins with the beast ("Is this gonna be on television?," one awestruck gal asks Davison at the end of her interview). Tim York's tuneful'n'twangy country theme song "The Ballad of McCullough's Mountain" smokes in no uncertain terms ("Some say he breathed fire like a dragon/Some say a giant ape with a human soul"). Okay, this silly picture sure ain't no celluloid masterpiece, but as far as Sasquatch cinema movies go it's well above average.
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