Apparently he appeared when a bridge collapsed, he is ment to bring bad luck and his eyes are hypnotic
The bunnyman, the slit mouth woman, mothman, you know the rest.
A plane hijacked by terrorists caused the 9-11 The Mothman does not cause disasters, only fore-tells of them. If there was a mothman involved in 9-11 that's all he was doing and maybe Pres. Bush should have listened to him -- but then we all know how Bush reacted to such information.
The Mothman Prophecies was created in 1975.
The first reported sighting of the Mothman in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, occurred on November 15, 1966. Two couples claimed to have encountered a large, winged creature with glowing red eyes while driving near an abandoned TNT plant. This sighting marked the beginning of a series of Mothman reports in the area, which continued until the collapse of the Silver Bridge in December 1967. The Mothman legend has since become a significant part of local folklore.
There are many rumors that state that Mothman was once a human, but he was exposed to a large amount of radiation from a factory, and he was morphed into a Mothman.
Yes, I am the Mothman and I am thinking of coming back.... to kill you
The Mothman Prophecies was released on 01/25/2002.
The Production Budget for The Mothman Prophecies was $42,000,000.
The Mothman did not destroy any bridge. There were reports of sightings of the Mothman near the Silver Bridge in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, prior to its collapse in 1967, but there is no evidence to suggest that the Mothman caused the bridge to fall.
Mothman is rumored to have killed many people. Supposedly everyone that sees him has died or will die. Mothman deaths have not been proven, however.
The Mothman legend traces back to sightings in Point Pleasant, West Virginia in the 1960s, with numerous eyewitness accounts describing a large, winged creature. Skeptics attribute the sightings to misidentifications of owls or other birds, while others believe it could have been a new species. The mystery surrounding Mothman continues to captivate people, making it a compelling topic for discussion and speculation.
NO!