The Creep Tapes [portable]
Tubi or Shudder? Check your local streaming—but watch it with the lights on. And maybe lock your bathroom door.
Unlike a standard movie sequel, the series treats each story as a standalone “tape,” allowing the creators to take wild creative swings that would be unsustainable in a 90-minute runtime. According to Duplass, many of the absurdist and surreal ideas they had for a potential “Creep 3” felt too “zany” for a feature, but perfectly fit the 30-minute episodic format. The Creep Tapes
If you want to dive deeper into this universe, I can provide more details. Let me know if you would like me to: Summarize the of specific standout episodes Tubi or Shudder
First, let's clear up the confusion. "The Creep Tapes" is not a single film. It is a loose, transmedia collection of found footage that exists within the universe of Patrick Brice and Mark Duplass’s cult classic, Creep (2014) and its sequel, Creep 2 (2017). Unlike a standard movie sequel, the series treats
The Creep Tapes did more than just satisfy a patient fanbase; it expanded the boundaries of how independent filmmakers can approach television. By keeping production costs low and creative control high, Brice and Duplass bypassed traditional Hollywood red tape to deliver a pure, unadulterated vision of psychological horror.
The Creep Tapes consist of over 20 short animations, each with its own unique style, tone, and level of creepiness. The videos range from a few seconds to several minutes long and feature a variety of content, including:
Josef’s greatest weapon is not a knife or a gun; it is his vulnerability. He weaponizes the social contract. He shares deeply personal, often tragic (and entirely fabricated) stories to force his victims to lower their guard. The dread builds because the audience recognizes the trap, watching the victim tolerate increasingly bizarre behavior out of polite compliance or professional obligation. 2. The Blurred Line Between Comedy and Terror