Watch: New Loch Ness Monster Documentary

Paranormalis

Think outside the mind
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New Hampshire resident Aleksandar Petakov has just released a short documentary on the Loch Ness monster.

The 11-minute film walks the viewer through different theories as Petakov interviews Loch Ness Monster hunter Steve Feltham.


We sat with the 22-year-old filmmaker to find out more about his work.

“My name is Aleksandar Petakov, I live near Boston. I graduated from Quinnipiac University in May of 2015 with a BA in Film, Video & Interactive Media and minors in History and Political Science,” he explains. “I have worked on numerous films ranging from student, independent and documentary films over the years. Currently I am doing freelance video work in the Boston area after traveling for a few months in the fall.”

Petakov, who considers filmmaking “a job and a hobby”, believes the possibility of a dinosaur-like creature living in the infamous lake is highly unlikely and that alternative theories should be looked into.

“I’ve been interesting in lake monsters, Bigfoot and the unknown ever since I was a young boy. The philosophy of legendary agent Mulder is ‘I want to believe’. I would say I share some of that sentiment. While it’s incredibly fascinating to ponder that a dinosaur could still exist in Loch Ness, I think it is simply wishful thinking and highly unlikely,” he says.

“Steve Feltham has his recent Wels Catfish theory, which I think seems quite plausible. I will say however I do find it very interesting that lake monster sightings occur around the world, often in lakes in the northern hemisphere, like Loch Ness, Lake Champlain in the US and Okanagan in Canada, that were once connected to the ocean, or resulted from glaciers. I think science offers some solutions to many of the sightings, but ultimately it is human hubris to claim we know everything about these mysteries bodies of water. We know so little about the ocean, so there have to be unknown species, perhaps even a few large ones.”

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The documentary maker shares similar thoughts about Bigfoot and likes to keep an open yet skeptical mind.

“From what I understand, the human family tree is constantly expanding with new discoveries, like the Flores ‘Hobbit’. What children today learn is different than what children a few decades ago learned about our ancestors, as our knowledge of them is expanding,” he meticulously articulates. “I have spent a fair amount of time in the wilderness of the Northeast United States and been to places like the Great Smoky Mountains and Alaska, witnessing first hand how wild some of these areas still are. Is it possible that near human ancestors still may live in remote wilderness areas in the US, Canada and Russia, where most of these ‘Bigfoot’ sightings occur? Possibly. Or could Bigfoot, like lake monsters, simply be a human desire for mystery and intrigue? Also possible. I’m not entirely sure, so I like to investigate things myself.”

And that’s what his next project will be about, he explains, as he tells us about his plans to travel to northern California this spring. He will thoroughly investigate the Bigfoot phenomenon by visiting historical locations and interviewing numerous eyewitnesses. His intentions are to turn the gathered data into another documentary.

But cryptids and the paranormal are not the only topics Petakov likes to dive in. He is currently working on a film featuring his recent travels to secretive North Korea.

“Having been to one of the most isolated countries on earth I truly feel fortunate to have at least some insight into this mysterious land. With that I would like to share those experiences and help fill in some blanks about this country, especially in such a time of volatility between North Korea and much of the world,” he says.

To check out Petakov’s work and for updates and information regarding his future projects, visit his website PetakovMedia.

The post Watch: New Loch Ness Monster Documentary appeared first on Cryptozoology News.
 

Carl Miller

Active Member
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Loch Ness monster has become part of the folclore. I think the idea relating to folks gathering by the fire talking about mysteries in a lake. That's what folk lore idea leads our mind to. Where there is smoke there must be fire. I know there is an old Tibetan belief over deities which reside in the depths of lakes. Loch Ness monsters, thus, would be just another spirit of the element. We know that elemental spirits of the water and from bucolic surroundings coalesce and gain strength into many different forms, e.g. dragon form, monster shape or angel like shape. Now after 'Hobbit' has become quite popular nowadays people seem to have no more trouble to buy for such a theory. I mean the theory that Loch Ness Monster could really have been the manifestation of the elements of Mother Nature. One thing we can be sure of, with all the novalties in technology if Loch Ness Monster really existed It would have been discovered by now. Thus, the Lock Ness Monster exists only in the imaginary of the populace.
 


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