The Playlist by Drew Taylor
Creep is a tiny movie whose uniqueness feels positively seismic. If there's one thing Creep has, it's an abundance of personality, and that cannot be understated.
User Rating
Director
Christopher Smith
Cast
Franka Potente,
Vas Blackwood,
Ken Campbell,
Jeremy Sheffield,
Paul Rattray,
Kelly Scott
Genre
Horror,
Mystery,
Thriller
After missing the last train home, party-loving Kate realizes she is trapped in a subway station and has no choice but to wait through the night. But she is not alone--an attacker is pursuing her, and Kate must survive in the labyrinth of tunnels beneath the streets of London until the sun comes up.
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The Playlist by Drew Taylor
Creep is a tiny movie whose uniqueness feels positively seismic. If there's one thing Creep has, it's an abundance of personality, and that cannot be understated.
The New York Times by Andy Webster
The film is remarkable, considering its minimal means and surprising lack of bloodshed, given the genre. Does it stay with you? A little.
Variety by Joe Leydon
A slow-burning found-footage suspenser with some mildly clever twists and a knockout payoff.
Village Voice by Simon Abrams
Superior found-footage horror film Creep tellingly loses steam after it stops being a rote but tense game of chicken between a normcore derangoid (he likes hikes, hugs, and pancakes) and his wary victim.
The Hollywood Reporter by John DeFore
Knowing and funny without straining to be clever, the found-footage-style pic works better than the Duplass Brothers' 2008 Baghead, with which it has some elements in common.
The Dissolve by Scott Tobias
While Creep has the limited scope of DIY filmmaking at its most rudimentary, that contributes to a tone that’s unusually playful and entertaining without coming off as a lark.
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