The Ugly Bird is a stop-motion monster from the 1972 Appalachian folk fantasy film The Legend of Hillbilly John, created by special effects veteran Jean Warren and animated by Harry Walton; this creature, resembling a cross between a buzzard and vulture, represents one of the most overlooked stop-motion monsters of the 1970s, having been largely forgotten due to the film's obscure status and its unique blend of folk music, mountain legends, and supernatural horror elements.
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The Weird Stop-Motion Monster Hidden in a Forgotten Fantasy FilmAdded:
There are a lot of forgotten stopmotion monsters out there. Some come from famous movies that just don't get talked about anymore.
Others are buried inside films so obscure that most monster fans have never even heard of them. And today's creature falls squarely into that second category. Because hidden inside a strange Appalachian folk fantasy from 1972 is a giant stopotion bird monster that looks like it escaped from a lost Ray Harryhausen movie. The film is The Legend of Hillbilly John, also released as Who Fears the Devil? And if you've never heard of it, you're definitely not alone.
Based on stories by fantasy writer Manley Wade Wellman, the movie follows a wandering folk musician named John, played by folk singer Hes Capers.
After his grandfather dies challenging dark supernatural forces in the Appalachian Mountains, Jon sets out on a quest armed with a silver stringed guitar that's supposed to protect him from evil. Along the way, he encounters witches, hoodoo men, and the purest evil of all, cows.
>> The result feels like someone took a folk tale, a fantasy novel, a horror movie, and a backwoods acid trip and blended them together. You got good reason to be scared.
>> But for monster fans, the real attraction arrives during a segment based on Wellman's story, O Ugly Bird.
John wanders into a remote mountain community that's being terrorized by a sinister hoodoo man named Onelm. And Onelm has a secret weapon, a giant supernatural bird. Not a guy in a suit, not a puppet dangling from strings, a full stop motion creature. The ugly bird looks like a cross between a buzzard, a vulture, and something that crawled out of an Appalachian nightmare. It's scraggly, it's ugly, it's awkward, and that's exactly why it works. The creature swoops through the air, attacks Jon, and generally causes chaos for everyone around it.
The animation isn't on the level of Harryhausen's work, but that's actually what makes it charming. The bird has real weight, real personality, and enough movement to feel alive rather than simply being a prop photograph frame by frame.
What's especially surprising is who was involved. The effects were supervised by special effects veteran Jean Warren, whose career included films like Jack the Giant Killer and Dinosaurus.
The actual animation was largely handled by Harry Walton, a veteran effects artist whose long career included work on projects ranging from Octamman to later productions like The Primevables.
And the Ugly Bird may be one of the most overlooked creatures either of them ever worked on. Part of the reason is simply that the legend of Hillbilly John itself has largely faded from view. The movie was released during a period when fantasy films weren't exactly dominating theaters. And its unusual blend of Appalachian folklore, music, horror, and fantasy made it difficult to market. It wasn't quite a horror film. It wasn't quite a fantasy adventure, and it definitely wasn't a mainstream family movie. So, it slowly slipped into obscurity, which is a shame because even beyond The Bird, the movie is packed with fascinating ideas. One section involves a haunted mountain inhabited by bizarre folklore creatures with names like the behinder, the flat, and the Bamit.
Unfortunately, apart from a few roars and howls, those creatures are only mentioned in the movie rather than shown, probably because the budget couldn't stretch that far. Just imagine what this movie could have been if all of them had received the stop-otion treatment. Instead, the ugly bird ends up carrying the monster side of the film almost entirely by itself. And thankfully, it does a pretty good job.
Watching the movie today feels like discovering a lost branch of fantasy cinema. The kind of movie that could only have existed in the early 1970s. A movie where folk music, mountain legends, witches, the devil, and a stopotion monster bird all coexist in the same story. And somehow it works.
Maybe not perfectly, but memorably.
So, if you're a fan of forgotten fantasy films, obscure monster movies, or stop motion creatures that deserve a lot more attention than they've received, The Legend of Hillbilly John is absolutely worth tracking down. Because hidden among its Appalachian folklore and wandering ballads is one of the strangest and most overlooked stopmotion monsters of the 1970s, the Ugly Bird. A creature that's been flying under the radar for more than 50 years.
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