Happy Halloween (to those who celebrate?)
Anyone who listens to Tony Merkel’s podcast, The Confessionals, knows that Tony isn’t one to just sit behind the microphone and talk. No, he was a truck driver. He moved to a red state, with his wife and kids, all his guns, and emergency preparedness supplies. He’s out there trying to build a media empire to change the culture.
And one time, he went to Kentucky to hunt for the dogman.
First things first: Tony Merkel has been called the Joe Rogan of paranormal podcasts. Every week he’s got guests on his show who have had some bizarre experiences. Whether it’s ghosts, hatman, UFO encounters, bigfoot, or demons, he’s ready to talk to anyone who has a story to tell. I appreciate that he unapologetically holds a Christian worldview, but listens to anyone whether he agrees with them or not.
Sometimes he get preachy, but not to them.
One of his guests was a young man, “Kyle” who told a horrifying story about his encounter with a dogman in the hills of Kentucky. For the uninitiated, dogman is not bigfoot. Dogman is much scarier. He’s the werewolf of legend, evil and ruthless. While some people have claimed friendship with bigfoot, no one makes dogman a pet.
They’re too busy running in terror.
Except maybe Tony and his film crew. After hearing Kyle’s story, Tony gathered his guns and four monster hunting friends to go to the scene of the attack and spend a week in the woods. Expedition Dogman (now on Amazon Prime), is what happened. Now, I don’t make a habit of watching cryptid documentaries when there’s so much I feel obliged to see. But being a fan of the podcast, I decided to take a look.
I watched it as film student, rather than a true believer. That said, I gave them the benefit of the doubt that nothing was staged.
Tony has the right sort of charisma to carry a show or documentary. His presence carries the film, and the other guys in interview are engaging. Kyle’s face is blurred out, and my chief criticism is that they didn’t subtitle everything he said. Yes, it would be a pain. But it’s the one professional touch Expedition Dogman lacks. This is really about Kyle’s journey, and if we can’t see his face or hear his voice clearly, we need his words.
Weird things happen.
Spoiler alert: they don’t see dogman. Fortunately, director Christian B. Roper knows his story structure and is able to apply those principles to the documentary. The pacing is spot on as the backstory is laid out, the guys encounter an obstacle at the threshold, and have a real fright at the midpoint when things seemed to be going well (all things considered). The team has a quiet moment that also serves to raise the stakes before their biggest push. And while they don’t achieve their primary goal, Roper manages to wrap things up with a bit of catharsis.
And a chilling twist.
Will Expedition Dogman win any awards or be the definitive dogman doc? Probably not. Do I feel like I wasted my time and money watching it? Not at all. Nor do I think Tony wasted his time on this journey. The resulting story was worth telling, the experience worth documenting, and I’m glad I was able to experience it from the safety of my couch.