Seattle’s Loch Ness Monster Seems to Be Dying

Some things should be allowed to rest in peace.

Back in 2016, I wrote a blog post about Willatuk, Seattle’s tongue-in-cheek Loch Ness Monster, who came complete with a really awful mockumentary, ballad, and website. For some reason I was thinking about Willatuk today, and decided to see how she or he was doing. And the answer to that is… not very well at all.

The movie was renamed “Seattle’s Loch Ness: The Lake Washington Sea Monster”, which was probably a good idea in terms of branding, and yet not good enough, it seems. The website no longer exists. the movie seems to only be available on something called Flixfling, which I had never before heard of. You can see a preview of it on YouTube here, but the movie itself has been yanked off YouTube due to a copyright claim. Trust me when I say you aren’t missing much, though. The ballad, however, is still on YouTube, and it, too, is just as bad as I remembered.

Two things I failed to mention in the original post: The film is actually narrated by Graham Greene. I’d love to know how they managed to pull that off, and I’d love even more to know if Greene regrets his participation now. The second thing I failed to mention is that the film actually did win an award. Yup. It won a “Stiffy” in 2010. The award’s name alone tells you all you need to know about its prestige, but you can read more about that here.

So, it appears that Willatuk is on its last legs. Some things should be allowed to rest in peace. May WIllatuk do so, for all our sakes.

And now, without further ado, I leave you with the original post from July 19, 2016.

How Rumors Get Started

The other day I saw something really strange go under my drawbridge. It looked like a sailboat mast, only… there was no sailboat beneath the mast. Maybe a really, REALLY tall periscope? An optical illusion? I’m just going to have to accept the fact that I’ll never know the end of that story. And maybe I need to get more sleep. Or update my eyeglass prescription. Or perhaps, like Scrooge, I was digesting a bit of underdone potato.

And then a friend sent me a link to a website about Willatuk, Seattle’s equivalent of the Loch Ness Monster. Jeez, glad I didn’t know about that before I went kayaking a few weeks ago. I’d have been rather creeped out.

Willatuk

While I always have and always will view stories about sea monsters with a healthy level of skepticism, the Willatuk website did suck me in for a second. Not in terms of believing the creature actually exists, but in terms of believing that other people believed it.

But then a few red flags popped up. First of all, the website mentions a Wonkatilla Tribe, which I’d never heard of, and couldn’t find online except in relation to this website. It also mentions a tunnel 5 miles beneath the surface of Lake Washington which lets out into Puget Sound, and is supposedly the passage that this creature takes. Uh… Lake Washington is only 214 feet deep, folks.

And one couple supposedly saw Willatuk transiting through the locks. I think the people working the locks would have noticed that. And shut him in. And made a fortune off of him.

Upon further investigation, I discovered that the timeline of Willatuk sightings is a purely fictional creation of the guy who made the film Willatuk: The Legend of Seattle’s Sea Serpent. He also happened to make the website. This kind of gave me a giggle.

But it also irritates me a little, because not everyone will follow through the way I did. So I suspect that we’re now going to hear about the occasional Willatuk sighting, and eventually people will forget that it all started off as a work of fiction, and maybe 200 years from now fiction might be viewed as fact and… well, you know, that’s how rumors get started.

I leave you now with the (really bad) Ballad of Willatuk, which was also created for the movie. Because I love you, dear reader, I actually sat through the movie myself for research purposes, and it’s an hour of my life I’ll never get back and will always regret. No one has even bothered to rate it on the Rotten Tomatoes website, which is kind of a distinction in and of itself.

2 responses to “Seattle’s Loch Ness Monster Seems to Be Dying”

  1. The film was accepted by Netflix, streamed on Amazon for 8 years, is available at Scarecrow video, the UW library system and it’s now on Tubi! But everyone has their own opinion. Gotten lots of positive feedback over the years. Considered a campy cult classic by some. Glad it’s still on your mind all these years later!

    1. It’s hard not to think of these things when you gaze at the ship canal 8 hours a day. I wonder how I missed it on Amazon, and how it never got a single Rotten Tomatoes review if it was on there for 8 years. Fascinating. Thanks for the info, Oliver!

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