Cropsey: The Urban Legend
 
                            You may have to search the upper reaches of your cable line-up to find it, but those of you have the Investigation Discovery channel are in for a real treat tonight, as one of the best documentaries of 2010 airs multiple times (beginning at 9 p.m. eastern). Here our review of the theatrical release, as a reminder:
Joshua Zeman and Barbara Brancaccio grew up in separate parts of Staten Island, but both heard the legend of “Cropsey,” a combination Boogeyman and Hook-Hand who allegedly lived in the woods by an old abandoned hospital and snuck out at night to kidnap and disembowel children. Then in 1987, when Zeman and Brancaccio were teenagers, a mentally handicapped girl was abducted from the Willowbrook area, and during the trial of chief suspect Andre Rand, it came out that children had been going missing from that part of Staten Island since the 1970s, when the old Willowbrook State School for the mentally handicapped was shut down. Zeman and Brancaccio later bonded over their memories of the Rand trial and the Cropsey stories, and when Rand was about to be tried again for another old crime, Zeman (an indie film producer) and Brancaccio (an employee of New York’s social services department) decided to make a documentary about the whole weird story, to try and separate the facts from the campfire tales.
 
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
        