Entertainment Magazine

#2,121. Legend of the Chupacabra (2000)

Posted on the 07 June 2016 by Dvdinfatuation
#2,121. Legend of the Chupacabra  (2000)
Directed By: Joe Castro
Starring: Katsy Joiner, J.T. Trevino, Chris Doughton
Line from the film: "It looks like its intestines have been sucked out"
Trivia: Director Joe Castro's mother appears in the film, playing one of the "experts" interviewed during the movie
Legend of the Chupacabra, a found footage / mockumentary directed by Joe Castro, is an ultra-low budget monster movie that, in spite of its flaws, manages to conjure up a few genuine scares.
Three cryptozoologist students from a nearby college head to Texas in the hopes of capturing footage of the legendary Chupacabra, a carnivorous beast from south of the border that, according to some, has been feasting on the local livestock population. One of the students, Maria Esperenza (Katsy Joiner), has a more personal reason for wanting to track down the Chupacabra (it supposedly murdered her uncle a week before), and with heavily-armed former U.S. Marine George Armistad (Stan McKinney) backing them up, the trio heads to the farm of Daniel Webster (Chris Doughton), who reported one of his goats was killed the night before (Chupacabra is Spanish for “goat sucker”). It’s here that their terrifying adventure begins.
Despite its mockumentary approach (the movie also features talking-head interviews with several “experts”, all discussing their theories on where the monster comes from), there isn’t a single moment in Legend of the Chupacabra that we believe what we’re watching really happened. Part of the reason for this is the quality of the performances, which, across the board, are on the weak side. But more than that, the creature itself, played by a guy in the suit, looks like.. well, like a guy in a suit! In addition, the story gets a bit goofy from time to time, introducing not one but three religious mediums who insist the Chupacabra is a demon sent from hell.
Where Legend of the Chupacabra excels is in the way it handles its monster; unlike other films of this ilk, the Chupacabra appears early and often, usually popping up unexpectedly (resulting in some effective jump scares). Toss in special effects ranging from mediocre (a few of the dead corpses Maria and company encounter are so-so) to pretty damn impressive (there’s a late effect involving an arm that looked great) and you have a horror movie that, at times, delivers the goods. Legend of the Chupacabra may not be perfect, but it’[s not a total washout, either.


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