Watch this: Terrifying Owlman stalks visitors at abandoned hospital


Every day visitors arrive, from urban explorers to photographers, at the abandoned St. Mary's Children Hospital. Watch these normal people paralyze in fear as the terrifying Owlman approaches them. This video is actually a viral video produced for the feature-length supernatural chiller, Lord of Tears. The story goes as follows:

Lord of Tears tells the story of James Findlay, a school teacher tortured by childhood memories of a strange and unsettling entity - a figure dressed like a Victorian gentleman but with the head of an Owl, and elongated limbs with sharp claws.

It took the boy years to recover from his vision, years of forgetting before he could resume a normal life into adulthood. He might never have remembered had it not been for the death of his mother... the nightmares... the return of that familiar, watching presence.

As James faces a descent into madness, his only hope to fight his tormentor, to banish the evil that haunts him, is to return to his childhood home. He travels to the lonely mansion in the Scottish Highlands, a place notorious for its tragic and disturbing history. There, he must uncover, once and for all, the chilling truth behind the immortal stalker.



Comments

  1. Replies
    1. Thx Harry Bandini! Hope you are having a good one!

      Delete
    2. Work is over that always makes for a good day

      Delete
    3. Good one Chick !! Hoot !! Hoot!! (owlman said that too!!)

      Delete
    4. gotta love the Scottish accent. Stop fooking aboot.

      Delete
    5. To bad they don't try this retarded shit in Big Ole Texas! The owl-man would go nighty-night! And the lame ass film would go in a different direction.

      Delete
  2. owlsquatch gonna git ya fer shur

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

BREAKING: Finding Bigfoot Production Company Seeks Filming Permit In Virginia

Bigfoot injured by a forest fire was taken away and hidden by the authorities, not even Robert Lindsay can top this story

Samurai Chatter: Have you used it in the field?