A film is an object. Just like a book, a film exists and waits for someone to discover and promote it. The vast majority of both don’t make the cut and exist in obscurity. The Legend of Bigfoot by Ivan Marx is one of those obscure films. I only knew of it because it was included in the DVD pack called “Beast Collection,” which I’ve already mentioned a time or two. This set of movies is united by a few different themes which have little to do with one another. The “Bigfoot Terror” disc includes Marx’s Legend although there’s no terror here and it presents itself as a documentary. Interestingly, this movie actually had a theatrical release. Of course, the mid-seventies were a high-water mark for Bigfoot interest in general, prior to the current phase. Marx followed up his movie with a couple sequels and to his dying day claimed that his Bigfoot footage was authentic.
As far as the movie goes, it is just plain bad. The wildlife footage, shot by Marx, is actually impressive a time or two. Most critics dismiss his Bigfoot footage as a hoax, a view supported by the fact that the bona fide Bigfoot researchers he worked with eventually distanced themselves from him. The movie is rambling and dull but intriguing at the same time. It’s amazing, for example, that he was able to get this into theaters at all. But what drove the producers of “Beast Collection” to include it, beyond it perhaps having been cheap and bit of filler on a disc claiming “approx. 5 hours of yeti scares”? Well, it’s an object. And it fits the theme of “yeti” but not really that of “Terror.”
There’s not a ton of information on Ivan Marx online. IMDb has a mini-bio of him, noting the others who worked with him. Even his wife, Peggy, who appears in the film, gets a little IMDb notice. Such movies as this are hopeful artifacts. Those of us who struggle against obscurity can take heart that, although probably a hoax, a movie that would otherwise likely have been forgotten made its way into a schlocky collection of horror movies to be purchased by the gullible and the hardcore. As I mentioned in my post on Search for the Beast, I bought the collection to see Zontar: Thing from Venus, which, at the time, was available nowhere else. I got what I wanted, and oh so much less.
