The Legend Returns… Unfortunately
There are certain creatures of folklore that deserve respect. Dracula, for instance, has centuries of gothic cool. Bigfoot has charisma and great PR. But then there’s the Mothman—a winged harbinger of doom who, in 2010, landed on Syfy and promptly crashed into mediocrity.
Directed by Sheldon Wilson, Mothman is a made-for-TV movie that manages to turn an eerie urban legend into a ninety-minute exercise in wishful thinking. It’s a film so thoroughly beige that even the presence of the beautiful and talented Jewel Staite (Firefly, Serenity) can’t save it. And if Jewel Staite can’t save your movie, you might as well start the end credits at the 20-minute mark.
Once Upon a Time in Point Pleasant
The story begins in Point Pleasant, West Virginia—a town that, if this movie is to be believed, has a population of about twelve and a murder rate of twelve. A group of teens are camping by the river near an old mill where, legend has it, the Mothman is buried under some incinerators. Because that’s where ancient winged demons apparently retire: next to industrial waste.
While pulling a prank on their buddy Jamie, the teens accidentally drown him, then decide the best way to cover it up is by smashing his head with a rock. Because if there’s one thing horror movies have taught us, it’s that a little light murder makes everything better.
Fast forward ten years. The survivors have grown up, but their acting hasn’t. Katherine (Jewel Staite) is now a journalist who returns home to cover the town’s annual Mothman Festival, which is like Coachella but with more denim and fewer morals. Naturally, her return awakens the guilt—and the monster—that’s been lurking just under the surface.
The Return of the Bug-Eyed Boogeyman
Within minutes of Katherine’s arrival, the Mothman starts knocking off her old friends one by one, proving that even supernatural entities appreciate closure. The first victim gets vaporized in his RV, the second is yanked through a mirror, and the third dies in her car after apparently forgetting that doors lock.
The kills are messy, occasionally gory, but never scary. The Mothman appears through reflective surfaces, which could have been creepy if the CGI didn’t look like it came from a mid-2000s screensaver. Every time he emerges from a mirror, he’s accompanied by cheap “whoosh” sound effects and the faint smell of expired After Effects software.
It’s hard to feel fear when your monster looks like he’s buffering.
Jewel Staite Deserved Better
Let’s take a moment to appreciate Jewel Staite—because she’s the one bright spot in this murky swamp of a movie. She gives Katherine Grant actual depth, which is remarkable considering her dialogue consists mostly of lines like, “We can’t let it happen again!” and “It’s coming for us!”
Staite does what all good actors do in bad horror films: she acts like she’s in a better one. Unfortunately, the script keeps reminding her that she’s not. Every time she builds momentum, the movie undercuts her with exposition or another clumsy flashback of teenagers faking trauma.
If the Mothman had any decency, he would have spared her.
Reflections of Stupidity
The movie’s central gimmick—that the Mothman can only travel through reflective surfaces—is actually a cool idea. Mirrors, windows, TVs—these could all be portals of paranoia. Unfortunately, Mothman handles it like a drunk driver handles a GPS.
Characters constantly wander into reflective rooms, stare at shiny objects, or watch TV with the blinds open. At no point does anyone think, “Maybe avoid the mirrors until this blows over?” Instead, they do the cinematic equivalent of standing under a lightning rod in a thunderstorm and saying, “It’s probably fine.”
There’s even a scene where the Mothman attacks someone through a flat-screen television, because apparently Comcast doesn’t cover spiritual hauntings.
The Curse of Cornstalk (and the Script)
About halfway through, the film takes a detour into American folklore by introducing Chief Cornstalk, the vengeful Native American leader whose spirit supposedly birthed the Mothman. It’s the kind of exposition dump that makes you nostalgic for silence.
According to the movie, Cornstalk cursed the settlers who betrayed him, and his chopped-up remains were buried in a coffin lined with mirrors. Why mirrors? Don’t ask. Why does the Mothman look like a bat with a head cold? Don’t ask that either.
The movie treats Native American mythology with all the cultural sensitivity of a tourist shop selling dreamcatchers next to a Taco Bell. The ghostly revenge angle could’ve worked if it weren’t filtered through so much cliché that it feels like a term paper written by a sleep-deprived anthropology major.
The Supporting Cast: Victims of Plot and Paychecks
Katherine’s ex-boyfriend Derek (Connor Fox) exists mostly to run, yell her name, and occasionally swing a gun at the Mothman like he’s playing whack-a-mole. The rest of the cast fills out the standard Syfy survival lineup:
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The Sheriff Who Doesn’t Believe in Legends Until It’s Too Late ✅
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The Local Old Man Who Knows Everything But Won’t Shut Up ✅
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The Friend Who Thinks It’s All a Joke (Dies Immediately) ✅
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The Person Who Says “Let’s Split Up” (Also Dies Immediately) ✅
It’s comforting in a way. Like junk food. You know exactly what you’re getting, and you’ll feel worse after consuming it.
A Festival of Failures
The grand finale takes place during the Mothman Festival, which looks suspiciously like a county fair that ran out of corn dogs. People scream, lights flicker, and the monster swoops down like an angry parade balloon. There’s fire, there’s chaos, and somehow there’s still time for a last-minute moral debate about guilt and redemption.
Frank Waverly (Jerry Leggio), the town’s blind oracle, decides to unleash the Mothman on everyone to “cleanse” the town’s sins. Because nothing says spiritual balance like mass murder at a carnival. The monster kills him, of course, along with several random bystanders who probably just came for the funnel cake.
In true Syfy fashion, the film ends not with resolution but with sequel bait. Katherine survives, but in the final shot her eyes turn red as moths burst from her body—proving that even after death, the Mothman still has a flair for the dramatic.
Special Effects from the Depths of 2003
The creature design deserves special recognition, if only for ambition. The Mothman looks like a cross between a gargoyle, a turkey vulture, and the world’s angriest light fixture. His wings flap awkwardly, his face never quite syncs with his movement, and his glowing eyes resemble two cherry cough drops.
Every time he flies, the camera cuts so rapidly it’s like watching a trailer for an energy drink. It’s less “terror in the night” and more “someone accidentally left a filter on in iMovie.”
Final Flight
Mothman had all the ingredients for decent B-movie fun: a creepy urban legend, a solid lead actress, and a setting tailor-made for small-town paranoia. What it delivered instead was a reheated stew of tropes, clunky dialogue, and CGI that would embarrass a PlayStation 2.
Even Jewel Staite’s charm can’t pierce the gloom of bad writing and cheaper production values. She’s the only reason this movie doesn’t collapse under its own wingspan completely. Watching her give 100% while surrounded by 10% effort is almost heartbreaking.
Still, if you’re the kind of person who enjoys watching luminous moth-bats attack morally bankrupt people in small-town America—first, seek help. But second, this one’s for you.
Final Grade: D
Despite Jewel Staite’s glow, “Mothman” remains the cinematic equivalent of staring into a bug zapper for 90 minutes—and realizing the bug has more personality.

