Filmmaker Claims Bigfoot May Be Extraterrestrial Dimensional Being

Posted Friday, July 10, 2026

By Squatchable.com staff

So there's this interview that recently popped up on YouTube, and honestly, it's one of those conversations that really gets the gears turning. Linda Eastburn had filmmaker Larry Eisler III on her channel to chat about something most people in this community have probably wondered about at least once: what if Bigfoot isn't just a creature we've simply overlooked in the woods? Larry isn't your typical researcher. He's a filmmaker who got pulled into the Sasquatch world almost by accident, and his personal experiences in the field are what shaped his perspective. About a month before this interview aired, he was out at Brown County State Park in central Indiana, which has a long history of encounters. He was wearing high-end headphones and super sensitive microphones while a paranormal investigation was happening nearby. Through those headphones, he picked up on repeated knocking sounds coming from the woods. When he asked the other investigators if they heard it, they had no idea what he was talking about. Then it happened again deeper into the session. That kind of selective auditory experience is something a lot of people in this field have reported over the years, and it's hard to dismiss when it comes from someone with professional audio equipment. Not long after that, Larry went on a Bigfoot hunt in northern Wisconsin, another hotspot for sightings. While he didn't spot a Sasquatch himself, he did see something fascinating: little orange orbs floating through the trees in the middle of a state park where there are absolutely no light sources. These orb phenomena have been reported alongside Sasquatch sightings for decades, and many witnesses believe there's a connection between the two. Larry was clearly intrigued by this and started asking bigger questions about what people are actually seeing out there. Here's where the conversation gets really interesting. Larry brought up something that doesn't get discussed enough: if Bigfoot is just a flesh-and-blood creature, how do you explain the complete lack of remains? No bones, no scat, no carcasses. Sure, some animals are smart enough to bury their waste or hide their dead, but an entire species managing to leave zero trace across centuries of human exploration? That takes a level of intelligence that goes beyond normal animal behavior. That's where the extraterrestrial theory starts to make sense to him. But he actually makes a distinction that I hadn't heard framed quite this way before. Extraterrestrial means something from outside our planet, star system, or galaxy. Ultraterrestrial, on the other hand, means something that resides on Earth but has the ability to shift between dimensions or planes of existence. And honestly, that second concept lines up perfectly with a lot of Native American oral traditions. Many tribes have long described Sasquatch as beings who can move between worlds, acting as guardians of the forest in our reality while existing somewhere else entirely. When you think about it that way, the dimensional theory isn't some new-age idea. It's actually one of the oldest explanations out there. Larry also brought up the famous Pennsylvania incident from years back, where witnesses reported seeing a Bigfoot being lowered from an acorn-shaped UFO. There's actually a monument there now commemorating the event. Whether you believe that story or not, it's one of those accounts that keeps the UFO-Sasquatch connection alive in the public consciousness. And it ties into a broader point Larry made: if these beings do have some kind of advanced capability, whether technological or dimensional, it would explain how a creature that large could sustain itself in environments that simply don't have enough food to support a big mammal, let alone a family of them. He even drew a comparison to the Wookiees from Star Wars, which sounds silly at first, but his point was actually pretty solid. George Lucas created a species that was organic, lived in forests, had advanced intelligence, and somehow also had access to interstellar travel. Fiction often predicts reality in weird ways, and Larry thinks it's worth asking how many things we've seen in sci-fi films might actually be closer to truth than we realize. The whole interview is worth checking out because Larry comes at this from a fresh angle. He's not a lifelong Sasquatch researcher, and he admits that openly. But his outsider perspective actually leads to some really thought-provoking questions about what Bigfoot could be and why the traditional explanations keep falling short. It's the kind of conversation that reminds you why this subject never gets old.