Oh, the TV series! That’s where the legacy kinda continued. After the movie’s success, 'Harry and the Hendersons' brought the big guy to the small screen for a couple of seasons. It had a similar vibe—sweet, silly, and full of family moments—but with standalone episodes. No second movie ever happened, which is a shame because the concept had so much potential for expansion. The show’s a hidden gem if you can find it, though!
Bigfoot and the Hendersons holds such a special place in my heart—it's one of those nostalgic films that feels like a warm hug. The original 1987 movie, with its mix of humor and heart, introduced us to the lovable Harry and his chaotic yet endearing bond with the Henderson family. There was actually a TV series spin-off called 'Harry and the Hendersons' that ran from 1991 to 1993, expanding the story with weekly adventures. It kept the same charm but leaned more into episodic family shenanigans.
As for direct sequels, the answer's a bit bittersweet—no follow-up films were ever made. Rumor has it there were discussions over the years, especially with the reboot trend, but nothing materialized. I’d have loved to see Harry’s antics in a modern setting, maybe with the original cast popping in for nostalgia. The show’s a fun consolation, though, and worth tracking down for fans craving more of that quirky Bigfoot energy. Sometimes, the magic of a story is best left untouched, but I wouldn’say no to a surprise revival!
2025-12-21 08:08:30
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Wanting to escape the turmoil last year had caused, my mom thought a fresh start was what we needed, so we moved to a different country. My first clash with the three Glass brothers happened at the airport, and ever since then, they’ve been everywhere I go. Turns out they’re my neighbors and the golden boys of my new high school too.
I want to stay away from them and focus on maintaining my GPA and the drama-free life I promised myself, but it’s not working. There’s a dangerously strong pull between us that feels almost unreal. My pulse trips over itself when they’re near, my blood boils when I see them with other girls, and my body betrays me, craving their slightest touch. It’s confusing, maddening and especially aggravating. The fact that all three of them look like they had stepped out of a dark fantasy novel written by a woman with unrealistic expectations wasn’t helping the case.
Then I witnessed horror—bones snapping and reforming, fur replacing skin. The Glass brothers aren’t humans; they are beasts, Lycans, Supreme Alphas, and just as I thought things couldn’t get worse, they tell me the pull I have been feeling is because I’m mated to them—all three of them. But luckily, I have the chance to reject them, and I’m going to take it, because I’m just an ordinary human girl.
I am not Beauty.
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Dean and Cataleya are a brother and sister who help to lead of group of hunters targeting the mythical beings that threaten the humans in their northern Arizona town. They are getting ready to start a new year in college when certain events lead to an unlikely partnership with a nearby werewolf pack they share a rocky truce with. As tensions run high, secrets from the past come to light throwing their lives in a direction neither of them ever saw coming.
Alec, Zander, and Kade are werewolves ready to start their leadership roles in their pack. First they have to deal with an odd increase in rogue activity. As they are searching for answers they find a whole lot more than they bargained for when they are forced to work with the hunters they always try to avoid. Keeping everyone safe may be what brought them all together, but will new found relationships keep them together or widen the chasm that has been there for generations?
A wolf howls.
The forest stills… for a moment.
Then, all wildlife burst into motion. Every living thing, from the smallest lizards and toads to the great brown bears and powerful mountain lions, flee. Spiders scurry to the top of their webs. Birds take flight. Squirrels leap from branch to branch. Wide-eyed deer and elk jump over brush and fallen logs. A lone wolf pauses, but tucks his tail and turns to join the escape. The wind whips through the forest, causing leaves to fall and tall pines to groan. Thundering hooves and paws make the forest floor shake.
Finally, the forest stills. The wind gusts slow to a gentle and warm breeze. The wildlife seem calm once more and return to their foraging, napping, or grazing.
The wolf howls again.
++++++++++++++++++++++++
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Filled with action, thrills, sexy love scenes, and gripping drama, Wolf Mountain (book 2 of the dark fantasy romance trilogy) will pull on your emotions while it continues the story where "a Wolf Affair" left off.
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Cathy Wilkins' life has never been simple.
Heartbroken and lost after her boyfriend of three years leaves her without a word of explanation, Cathy is left to pick up the pieces of her shattered world. Overwhelmed and desperate for a change, she decides to climb the town’s mysterious mountain, determined to debunk the rumors of monstrous men lurking at its peak.
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Will Cathy find the strength to face the unknown and embrace a love that defies all logic, or will her journey end in heartbreak once more?
Join Cathy on a breathtaking adventure of self-discovery, passion, and the timeless search for a love that can conquer all.
To the citizens of Pierview, Taylor Yoshida is nothing more than a 16-year-old Japanese, home school, graffiti artist, delinquent, who’s always getting himself into trouble. However, Taylor harbors a dark secret from most of the people in town. He is the reincarnation of a kaiju; an interdimensional creature capable of ungodly abilities. But when more Kaiju attack Pierview, Taylor must shed his secrets and embrace his kaiju heritage to face these savage creatures and the secret organization responsible for their arrival known as Project Echidna.
so 'Where Bigfoot Walks: Crossing the Dark Divide' was right up my alley. Robert Michael Pyle's blend of natural history and myth really stuck with me—it felt like hiking through the Pacific Northwest with a storyteller who respects both science and legend. Sadly, there's no official sequel, but Pyle's other works like 'Sky Time in Gray’s River' carry a similar vibe—lyrical, rooted in place, and quietly mystical. If you're craving more Bigfoot content, the podcast 'Sasquatch Chronicles' or documentaries like 'Sasquatch' by Hulu dive deeper into sightings and folklore. Part of me hopes Pyle revisits the Dark Divide someday, though. The way he writes about the wild makes it feel alive in a way few authors manage.
For now, I’ve been filling the void with local legends from other regions. The Appalachian 'Mothman' or the Australian 'Yowie' have their own rich histories, and books like 'The Mothman Prophecies' or 'Australian Cryptozoology' scratch that itch. It’s funny how these stories weave into the landscape—almost like the land itself becomes a character. Pyle gets that, and I wish more writers did.