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Bog | |
---|---|
Directed by | Don Keeslar |
Written by | Carl Kitt |
Produced by | Michelle Marshall |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Jack Willoughby |
Edited by | John Montonaro |
Music by | Bill Walker |
Production companies | Bog Productions Nelsen Communications |
Distributed by | Marshall Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Bog is a 1979 American independent horror film directed by Don Keeslar and starring Gloria DeHaven, Aldo Ray, Marshall Thompson, and Leo Gordon.
This article needs an improved plot summary. (June 2018) |
Dynamite fishing in a rural swamp revives a prehistoric gill monster that lives on the blood of human females. When a local is fishing with dynamite in Bog Lake, something larger pops to the surface: a green bug-eyed monster awakened from a long sleep, which promptly begins killing fishermen who stumble across its lair. When biologist Ginny Glenn (Gloria DeHaven) discovers the creature's evolutionary nature, the local sheriff decides to use various methods to destroy the beast. Eventually the monster is killed after it is rammed with a truck, but its eggs remain.
The film was given a limited release theatrically in the United States by Marshall Films in 1979.[citation needed] It was subsequently released on VHS by Prism Entertainment Corporation.[citation needed] The film was released on DVD by Trinity Home Entertainment on Nov 1, 2005 and in Canada later that year by Maple Pictures. It was released twice by Allegro Corporation, both in 2011.[1] Dark Force Entertainment released it on Blu-Ray in the U.S. in June 2023 along with Mako The Jaws of Death.
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (September 2014) |
Leonard Maltin awarded the film 1 star or BOMB, calling the film "Ultra-cheap" and "[an] ultra-bad time-killer".[2] In his book Horror Films of the 1970s, film critic and independent filmmaker John Kenneth Muir gave the film 1 out of a possible 4 stars. In his review, Muir wrote, "They don't make movies like Bog anymore and we can all be grateful for that. This is a monster film made by people with only the most rudimentary knowledge of how to assemble a film. It is poorly acted, shot, written, and edited. It also commits the cardinal sin of being boring."[3]