Exists

2014 "The legend is real. So is the terror."
5.2| 1h21m| R| en| More Info
Released: 17 March 2014 Released
Producted By: Haxan Films
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A group of friends venture into the remote Texas woods for a party weekend and find themselves stalked by Bigfoot.

Genre

Horror

Watch Online

Exists (2014) is now streaming with subscription on Prime Video

Director

Eduardo Sánchez

Production Companies

Haxan Films

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Exists Audience Reviews

Ploydsge just watch it!
BroadcastChic Excellent, a Must See
Clarissa Mora The tone of this movie is interesting -- the stakes are both dramatic and high, but it's balanced with a lot of fun, tongue and cheek dialogue.
Abegail Noëlle While it is a pity that the story wasn't told with more visual finesse, this is trivial compared to our real-world problems. It takes a good movie to put that into perspective.
cynraven Don't watch this movie.Even Bigfoot swears this movie doesn't exist, never happened, isn't out there...Just look away.
welsch-37988 it's like watching a blank screen with scary noises in the back ground 70% of everything cannot be seen yet of course you have to have a skanky white girl wanting to have sex with her black boyfriend in the woods and a white guy as being a cuckold watching and when he stops them from getting it on the black guy makes it like it's a racial thing) do the movie makers think that Interracial porn of a white chick taking the all mighty BBC going to make more people watch the movie? white girls if your 1st and only priority is having a huge clock then shove a cucumber up your hu hut) sick of these stupid movies why doesn't the white girls have sex with big foot he probably is better in bed than any black guy and is more athletic and has a more powerful clock than the black guys. If big foot was real white women would be the 1st one to have there babies.
thelastblogontheleft This is, in many ways, your classic "found footage" movie — perhaps not surprising since it is directed by Eduardo Sánchez, who brought us The Blair Witch Project. A group of friends aim to spend some time together in the woods, staying in an uncle's old, dilapidated cabin when they aren't riding bikes or taking a dip in the lake. Almost immediately — before they even reach the house — things start to seem a bit awry. They hit some kind of animal with the car — it runs off before they have a chance to even see it — and then hear this mournful cry from the not-so-distance, but, true to the rules of horror movie cliché, they push onward, insisting on arriving at the creepy house in the shroud of darkness.The characters are nothing to write home about — truly forgettable, really, as they all fit into their predictable and stereotypical roles. Brian (played by Chris Osborn) is the amateur filmmaker of the group, always seen with camera in hand. While this might not be the most groundbreaking route to go, it does its part to help explain the main gripe that people usually have with found footage style movies — "why the hell are they still filming and not running the hell away?". Once we get a glimpse of Bigfoot and it's clear that something is stalking the woods around the house, Brian is hopeful that he can catch it on camera and have his moment of fame and recognition. This doesn't mean there aren't a few moments where you're thinking "dude ya couldn't put the camera down for 5 minutes?", but it does help to explain the urgency.Ultimately what I liked about this movie is how much it's almost more of a slasher flick than a mysterious monster movie. Bigfoot is out messin' things up in the daytime and crashing through the windows of the cabin. It chases Matt (played by Samuel Davis) — the brother trying to go for help on his bike — and it's a pretty terrifying scene. It traps the remaining friends in a camper and then terrorizes them — shaking the outside, pushing them towards the edge, and jumping from a cliff down onto them (the scene pictured above — I actually said "WHOA!" out loud when it happened). It's a freaking action star, and I liked that they didn't shy away from showing it (and that the costume and makeup were awesome enough to hold up to broad daylight shots).I don't totally get why Brian was the only one who was spared, but I personally liked the reasoning for the attacks — again, not the most groundbreaking, but it added a sad air to the movie. Not the most unique horror movie, or even specifically monster movie, but definitely a thrill ride.
Robert Schlie This movie was okay and had it's moments. But as a person who has actually had an encounter with this creature they failed on many of true nature of the beast.First off the Bigfoot scream, they failed big time on that one as well as saying at the start that Bigfoot is not docile. My encounter was just the opposite and totally unprovoked. Plus the reason there is no stories of Bigfoot attacking anyone is because do you really think the one being attacked would survive the onslaught of a 9-10 foot beast? It is an animal and not tamed or domesticated.But I digress. The movie was like I said okay but not any where near believable.