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The arc of John Keel's
experience and his trying to make senseof the events in Point Pleasant and ultimately not being able
to, and then having to
simply take a step back, accept that there are things
he's not ever going to be able to totally understand, and then go on with the rest ofhis life, which is essentially what he
did
experience and his trying to make senseof the events in Point Pleasant and ultimately not being able
to, and then having to
simply take a step back, accept that there are things
he's not ever going to be able to totally understand, and then go on with the rest ofhis life, which is essentially what he
did
Full Transcript
00:00:01.000 --> 00:00:03.726
The arc of John Keel's
experience
00:00:03.761 --> 00:00:07.178
and his trying to make senseof the events in Point Pleasant
00:00:07.213 --> 00:00:09.801
and ultimately not being able
to,
00:00:09.836 --> 00:00:13.909
and then having to
simply take a step back,
00:00:13.944 --> 00:00:16.498
accept that there are things
he's not ever going to be able
00:00:16.532 --> 00:00:18.224
to totally understand,
00:00:18.258 --> 00:00:19.881
and then go on with the rest ofhis life,
00:00:19.915 --> 00:00:21.917
which is essentially what he
did.
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Movie Summary
One of the most frightening of American urban myths is the legend of The Mothman, a red-eyed creature seen by some as a harbinger of doom in 1960s rural West Virginia, where sightings of the winged demonic beast were first documented near an old munitions dump known by locals as TNT. Many believe the Mothman to be a 1960’s phenomenon, an omen only appearing before tragedy, and disappearing after a flap of sightings and the subsequent Silver Bridge collapse in 1967. But what if there’s more? What if the origins of this omen trace back much further and go much deeper than anyone realized? And what if…the sightings never ended?