Most of us first encounter the Loch Ness story via our TV screens, often when we’re wee kids, filled with wonder for the world. My initial glimpse of Nessie came in the 1980s series “Arthur C. Clarke’s Mysterious World” – for an 11-year-old, an unmissable program – with its rotating crystal skull titles and stentorian voiceover (yes, there’s an episode devoted to Loch Ness).
Throughout the seventies and eighties, international TV crews arriving at the Great Glen followed a formula: beautiful shots of Scotland (a prehistoric lost world!), a few ripples on the water, mysterious music, and the very latest evidence.
But alas…Nessie never was ready for her close-up.
So with screentime to fill, the producers would seek out Monster Hunters and interview them about their experiences, their theories, their evidence. As the archives show, there’s lots of footage of men binocular-ing at the Loch, trying to look deep.
When I came to make my documentary, “Loch Ness: They Created a Monster,” I wanted to know more about these men (and occasional woman) who packed up their lives and came to the Great Glen to go a-hunting.