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The Creep Tapes

2024 American horror television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Creep Tapes
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The Creep Tapes is an American found footage horror television series created and directed by Patrick Brice, and co-written by Brice and Mark Duplass. It is the third installment of the Creep franchise. It premiered on the streaming services Shudder and AMC+ on November 15, 2024.

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In February 2025, the series was renewed for a second season.[1]

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Plot

The series takes a look at six different tapes of "Peachfuzz" and his previous victims.

Cast

Main

  • Mark Duplass as Jeff Daniels / Father Tom Durkin / Kyle / PeachFuzz

Special guest stars

  • Mike Luciano as Mike (episode 1)[2]
  • David Nordstrom as Elliot (episode 2)[2]
  • Josh Fadem as Jeremy (episode 3)
  • Josh Ruben as Brad Branson (episode 4)
  • Tai Leclaire as Harry P’s friend (episode 5)
  • Scott Pitts as Brandt (episode 5)
  • Krisha Fairchild as Mom (episode 6)
  • John Craven as Albert (episode 6)

Production

Development of a television series based on Creep was announced as soon as principal photography on the series had wrapped in June 2024.[3] Mark Duplass was confirmed to be reprising his role as the nameless killer.[3] Patrick Brice, the director of Creep (2014) and Creep 2 (2017), was announced to return as director and a co-writer alongside Mark Duplass.[4][5] It was also announced that the season would consist of six half-hour episodes.[4]

Release

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The first three episodes were shown at Fantastic Fest on September 25, 2024. The series premiered on Shudder and AMC+ on November 15, 2024, with a two-episode premiere.[4]

Episodes

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Reception

The Creep Tapes holds a critic rating of 75% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 12 reviews, with a non-critic score of 77%.[6] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 55 out of 100, based on 5 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.

Jarrod Jones of AV Club wrote a favorable review for The Creep Tapes, noting that while the show had some flaws, "At its best, The Creep Tapes transcends its content-mill trappings and becomes something approaching a work of art."[7] Meagan Navarro of Bloody Disgusting rated the show 4/5 skulls, calling it a "welcome expansion of the films. It’s not a reinvention of the format, but rather a fun experiment that explores more dark corners and impulses of a disturbed individual."[8]

Variety's Aramide Tinubu reviewed the first two episodes, stating that the series thus acted "more as a disjointed vanity project than a horror story spotlighting a homicidal maniac’s bloodlust."[9] Kaiya Shunyata of RogerEbert.com was also critical, rating it at 2/4 stars and noting that the first two episodes felt like a rehashing of the first two films.[10]

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References

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