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Patrick Brice
Patrick Brice
from Wikipedia

Donat Patrick Kack-Brice (born April 23, 1983), known professionally as Patrick Brice, is an American film director,[1] actor, screenwriter and cinematographer.[2] He is known for directing Creep (2014),[3] The Overnight (2015),[4][5] Creep 2 (2017), Corporate Animals (2019) and There's Someone Inside Your House (2021).

Key Information

Career

[edit]

Brice was born and raised in Grass Valley, California.[6] He graduated with a BFA from California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) School of Film & Video.[6] Creep, his first feature-film as director/writer/actor (co-starring Mark Duplass), was produced by Blumhouse Productions: it premiered at SXSW 2014 and was released through Netflix.[7] His second feature as director/writer, The Overnight (with Adam Scott, Taylor Schilling and Jason Schwartzman) premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival and was released by The Orchard.[8][9] He wrote and directed Creep 2, starring Duplass and Desiree Akhavan: it was released in 2017 through Netflix.[10] His latest film as director, Corporate Animals, starring Ed Helms and Demi Moore, premiered at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival.[11]

In March 2019 it was announced that Brice would direct the Netflix slasher film There's Someone Inside Your House,[12] an adaptation of the 2017 novel of the same name by Stephanie Perkins, with Henry Gayden writing the script. It was produced by 21 Laps Entertainment and Atomic Monster.[13][14] The film was released on October 6, 2021.[15][16][17]

In July 2020, it was announced that Brice would develop, write and direct a film adaptation for HBO Max based on Owen Laukkanen's suspense thriller novel titled The Wild.[15][18]

Filmography

[edit]

Film

Year Title Director Writer Notes
2014 Creep Yes Yes Also cinematographer and actor
2015 The Overnight Yes Yes
Hang Loose Yes Yes Co-directed with Sammy Harkham
2017 Creep 2 Yes Yes Also cinematographer and actor
2019 Corporate Animals Yes No
2021 There's Someone Inside Your House Yes No

Television

Year Title Director Writer Notes
2017–2019 Room 104 Yes Yes Directed episodes: "Pizza Boy", "Hungry", "Itchy", "Crossroads", "No Dice";
Wrote and directed episode: "Animal for Sale"
2024 The Creep Tapes Yes Yes Directed all 6 episodes

References

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from Grokipedia
Patrick Brice (born Donat Patrick Kack-Brice; April 23, 1983) is an American filmmaker, actor, screenwriter, and cinematographer best known for directing independent films that blend horror and comedy genres, including the found-footage psychological thrillers Creep (2014) and Creep 2 (2017), both co-written with and starring Mark Duplass, as well as the dark comedy The Overnight (2015). Born in Grass Valley, California, Brice graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Film and Video from the California Institute of the Arts in 2011, where his thesis short documentary Maurice (2011) premiered at the Rotterdam International Film Festival and won Best Short Documentary at the Florida Film Festival. His early career focused on experimental and semi-documentary projects influenced by mentors like Thom Andersen, before transitioning to narrative features with Creep, which earned critical acclaim for its tense, low-budget storytelling and holds a 91% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Brice's subsequent works, such as the satirical horror Corporate Animals (2019), the Netflix slasher There's Someone Inside Your House (2021), and the anthology series The Creep Tapes (2024–present) on Shudder, showcase his versatility in indie cinema and television, often exploring themes of unease and social awkwardness, though with varying critical success—Creep 2 achieved a perfect 100% on Rotten Tomatoes, while Corporate Animals received a 25% rating.

Early life and education

Early life

Patrick Brice was born Donat Patrick Kack-Brice on April 23, 1983, in Grass Valley, California. Little public information is available regarding his siblings or extended family. From the age of five until he left home at 17, Brice's family routine included weekly movie rentals every Thursday, a tradition facilitated by his mother, a therapist who conducted group sessions on those evenings. These viewings, often shared with his family, ignited his early passion for cinema, exposing him to a wide range of films during his childhood in the small town of Grass Valley. At age 17, Brice independently left home by obtaining his GED in 2000 and relocating from Grass Valley, marking the end of his pre-college years. This move paved the way for his pursuit of formal film education.

Education

After earning his GED, Brice briefly attended community college in . He later enrolled at the (CalArts) School of Film & Video, where he developed his early filmmaking skills in an experimental environment focused on innovative narrative and documentary approaches. Brice graduated with a (BFA) in 2011. As his thesis project, Brice created the short Maurice (2011), a 19-minute of Maurice Laroche, the owner and projectionist at Le Beverley, Paris's last remaining 35mm porno cinema. He produced the film during a study stint at , France's national . The film captures Laroche's dedication to preserving analog projection amid the decline of traditional cinemas, blending anthropological insight with personal reflection on fading cultural artifacts. Maurice premiered at the International Film Festival Rotterdam and later won the Grand Jury Prize for Best Short Documentary at the Florida Film Festival, marking Brice's first major recognition in the field.

Career

Early career

Before graduating from the in 2011, where his thesis film laid the groundwork for a documentary-style approach to , Patrick Brice entered the industry through behind-the-scenes roles on independent projects. In 2006, he was hired as a on the independent horror film (2008), where he served as the to the producer, handling various logistical tasks during pre-production and filming. Following his education, Brice pursued early directing experiments by creating additional short films, often self-financing them amid the financial and logistical challenges of independent filmmaking in the early , such as limited budgets and reliance on personal resources to complete projects. These efforts reflected the broader difficulties faced by emerging filmmakers at the time, including securing funding and distribution without major studio support, which Brice navigated through persistent experimentation in low-budget formats. Around 2011, Brice began a with , who became a close friend and collaborator shortly after Brice's graduation from CalArts, offering guidance on transitioning from experimental shorts to more structured narrative work and facilitating their first joint projects. This relationship provided crucial support in overcoming the isolation and resource constraints of indie production, marking the start of Brice's evolution toward feature-length storytelling.

Breakthrough and feature films

Brice's breakthrough came with his directorial debut (2014), a found-footage film that he co-wrote, directed, and starred in alongside . The story follows a videographer hired to film a dying man's final messages, only to encounter escalating unease from his eccentric client. Produced by and , the film premiered at on March 8, 2014, and received a special mention in the Official Fantàstic Panorama section at the 2014 . It was released on by The Orchard on June 23, 2015, followed by a global streaming debut on on July 14, 2015. Building on this success, Brice shifted to comedy with (2015), which he wrote and directed, featuring , , , and in a tale of two couples whose dinner invitation spirals into awkward revelations. Also backed by , the film premiered at the on January 23, 2015, earning a nomination for the Grand Jury Prize in the U.S. Dramatic Competition. It received further recognition with an Audience Choice Award nomination at the . Distributed by The Film Arcade, was released in limited theaters and on on June 19, 2015. Brice returned to horror with (2017), co-writing and directing the sequel that expands the found-footage format by following a video (Desiree Akhavan) interviewing a self-proclaimed (Duplass again). Produced once more by , it premiered at on October 6, 2017, and was released on on October 24, 2017, before streaming on starting December 23, 2017. The film maintained the intimate, improvisational style of its predecessor while deepening the psychological tension. In 2019, Brice directed the horror-comedy Corporate Animals, written by Sam Bain and starring Demi Moore as a tyrannical CEO whose team-building retreat in a cave turns deadly amid cannibalistic survival scenarios. The film, which blends satire with gore, premiered at Sundance on January 26, 2019, and was released on video on demand by Ascendent Entertainment on September 20, 2019. Moore's performance as the unhinged executive highlighted Brice's knack for character-driven unease in confined settings. Brice's feature work culminated in the 2021 slasher There's Someone Inside Your House, an adaptation of Stephanie Perkins's 2017 young adult novel, scripted by and produced by and for . The film follows high school students targeted by a masked killer exposing their secrets in a small town, starring Sydney Park and Theodore Pellerin. It debuted directly on on October 6, 2021, emphasizing teen drama amid visceral kills. Throughout these projects, Brice's ongoing partnership with underscored his evolution from indie shorts to genre features blending horror and humor.

Television and recent works

Brice expanded his television work with HBO's anthology series Room 104 (2017–2020), co-created by Mark and Jay Duplass, where he directed six episodes across multiple seasons, including "Pizza Boy" (Season 1, Episode 2), "Hungry" (Season 2, Episode 3), and "Animal for Sale" (Season 3, Episode 5), which he also wrote. In 2024, Brice co-created and directed The Creep Tapes, a found-footage horror anthology series on Shudder and AMC+ that extends the Creep franchise with Mark Duplass starring as the titular character across interconnected stories presented as recovered VHS tapes. Season 1 premiered on November 15, 2024, and was renewed for a second season ahead of its debut, which premiered on November 14, 2025. The series was renewed for a third season in August 2025, which is currently in pre-production. Brice directed episodes featuring guest stars such as David Dastmalchian, Robert Longstreet, and others. Earlier, in , Brice was attached to direct The Wild, a suspense-thriller adaptation of Owen Laukkanen's young adult novel for Max and Warner Max, but the project remains in development without a release date as of 2025. Post-2021, Brice has increasingly focused on formats and streaming platforms, with his announcement to direct Full Throttle Mindset, a dark comedic thriller produced by and starring and as a young burnout drawn into a Midwestern drug empire based on a true story, currently in .

Directing style and themes

Directorial techniques

Patrick Brice frequently employs found-footage and handheld camera styles in his horror films, particularly the Creep series, to foster a sense of intimacy and escalating paranoia. By utilizing a first-person perspective through the videographer protagonist, Brice immerses the audience directly into the character's experiences, capturing unfiltered personal moments that blur the line between observer and participant. This approach is achieved with practical equipment like prosumer Panasonic cameras, such as the AG-DVX100 or HVX series held by the actors themselves, allowing for raw, instinctual shots that heighten tension through disorienting transitions and prolonged takes. In Creep, for instance, the camera's constant motion during interactions builds unease by simulating real-time vulnerability, while hidden perspectives in Creep 2 amplify the stalker's unpredictability. Brice blends documentary realism, honed in his early short film Maurice, with narrative fiction to ground his stories in authentic emotional textures. His thesis project Maurice, a profiling the owner and of Paris's last 35mm porno theater, earned the Grand Jury Prize for Best at the Florida Film Festival and showcased his skill in capturing unscripted human quirks through observational filmmaking. This foundation influences his feature work, where found-footage elements mimic verité, drawing from CalArts influences like David Holtzman's Diary to infuse scripted scenes with lifelike spontaneity and psychological depth. Central to Brice's process are improvisational collaborations, especially with , which yield natural, unpredictable performances. Working from loose outlines rather than full scripts, Brice and Duplass improvise dialogue in extended takes—often 6-7 minutes—allowing characters to evolve organically and revealing subtle behavioral nuances. This method, rooted in their shared sensibility for odd, empathetic figures, extends beyond dialogue to thematic and plot , enabling a scrappy, childlike energy that enhances authenticity. Their close partnership, developed through mentorship and on-set co-direction, results in performances that feel unforced and deeply human. Brice's background in cinematography shapes his low-budget, practical shooting approaches, emphasizing flexibility and minimal crews. A CalArts Film/Video BFA graduate (2011), he often operates the camera personally, forgoing traditional cinematographers to maintain a hands-on, adaptable workflow. This is evident in productions like Creep 2, shot over six days with a small crew, where on-the-fly adjustments after reviewing takes ensure efficiency without compromising intimacy. His technique prioritizes location-based realism and improvisation over elaborate setups, making high-impact results achievable on constrained resources.

Recurring themes

Patrick Brice's films frequently explore social awkwardness and the hidden dangers lurking in everyday interactions, transforming mundane encounters into sources of unease. In Creep (2014), the protagonist's meeting with a seemingly eccentric stranger escalates through increasingly uncomfortable exchanges that highlight the vulnerability of casual trust, drawing on real-world anxieties about interpersonal boundaries. Similarly, (2015) dissects the tensions of a neighborhood dinner party, where polite conversation unravels into revelations of personal insecurities and unspoken desires, amplifying the discomfort of social facades. Central to Brice's oeuvre is the theme of , often rooted in voyeuristic perspectives that mirror his real-life apprehensions about vulnerability and observation. He has described drawing from personal experiences of heightened anxiety to infuse Creep and with authentic tension, where the act of filming becomes a for invasive scrutiny and escalating dread. This voyeuristic lens, enabled by found-footage techniques, underscores the psychological toll of being watched and the blurring of observer and observed. Brice also employs to corporate and suburban life, exposing the absurdities and hypocrisies within these environments. In (2019), a team-building retreat devolves into cannibalistic survival, serving as a biting commentary on exploitative and the performative optimism of modern . The film's exaggerated scenarios highlight the dehumanizing effects of corporate hierarchies, blending horror with dark humor to reveal the fragility of societal norms. Brice's thematic interests are shaped by influences from 1970s cinema and independent horror traditions. His 2011 short documentary Maurice profiles Maurice Laroche, the owner and projectionist at Paris's last 35mm porno theater, celebrating the tactile preservation of 1970s-era films amid digital shifts and underscoring Brice's affinity for analog authenticity in storytelling. These themes of paranoia and voyeurism continue in the anthology series The Creep Tapes (2024–present), where found-footage segments explore interpersonal unease and hidden threats in isolated encounters. Early involvement in independent horror projects, such as assisting on the 2008 film Pig Hunt, further honed his appreciation for low-budget genre innovation and psychological depth in horror.

Filmography

Feature films

Brice made his feature directorial debut with Creep (2014), which he also co-wrote with Mark Duplass and starred in as Aaron. The film was produced by Jason Blum and Mark Duplass under Blumhouse Productions and Duplass Brothers Productions. It was distributed by The Orchard in the United States and released on Netflix for video-on-demand. His second feature, The Overnight (2015), was written and directed by Brice. Key producers included Naomi Scott, with executive producers Jay Duplass, Mark Duplass, and Adam Scott. The film was distributed by The Orchard following its acquisition at the Sundance Film Festival. Brice returned to the found-footage horror genre with (2017), which he directed and co-wrote with . Producers were and Carolyn Craddock, with serving as executive producer. Distribution was handled by The Orchard in the US and internationally. (2019) marked Brice's direction of a script by . The production team included producers Keith Calder, Jessica Calder, Mike Falbo, and . It was distributed by Films after premiering at Sundance. Brice's most recent feature to date is There's Someone Inside Your House (2021), a original that he directed. Producers included , Dan Cohen, , and Michael Clear. The film was released directly on .

Short films and other works

Patrick Brice began his filmmaking career with short films during and shortly after his time at the (CalArts), where he focused on experimental documentary and forms. His earliest documented short, Love-Love (2006), is a lighthearted greeting video created for attendees of a music and art event in San Francisco's Mission District, marking his initial foray into directing. In 2010, Brice directed Wolf Creek, a brief poetic short film celebrating the natural landscape of Wolf Creek in Grass Valley, California, which flows toward the American River. Brice's CalArts thesis project, the 2011 short documentary Maurice, profiles Maurice Laroche, the owner and projectionist of the Beverly, Paris's last porno cinema, and premiered at the International Film Festival Rotterdam before winning the Grand Jury Prize for Best Short Documentary at the Florida Film Festival. Later, Brice co-directed the 2015 short Hang Loose with Sammy Harkham, a piece following an aimless surfer named Wade who returns to his coastal hometown and confronts past relationships. Beyond directing, Brice has taken on non-directing roles in select projects, including as the lead videographer in his own found-footage works and contributing to early experimental pieces during his CalArts studies, though specific external credits in collaborations remain limited to collaborative cameos in segments.

Television directing

Brice directed six episodes of the HBO anthology series Room 104, created by Mark and Jay Duplass, spanning its four seasons from 2017 to 2020. In season 1, he helmed episode 2, "Pizza Boy" (2017), which follows a pizza delivery worker entangled in a couple's unsettling role-playing scenario. For season 2, Brice directed episode 4, "Hungry" (2018), centering on two strangers enacting a bizarre mutual fantasy involving extreme hunger. He returned for season 3 to direct episode 2, "Animal for Sale" (2019), which he also wrote, depicting a caretaker negotiating the sale of an exotic gorilla in the titular room; episode 3, "Itchy" (2019), about a man isolating to treat a persistent skin condition; and episode 11, "Crossroads" (2019), exploring a woman's reckoning with a demonic pact from her youth. In the series' final season, Brice directed episode 8, "No Dice" (2020), featuring a game show host attempting to exploit an elderly fan during a meet-and-greet. Brice created, co-wrote, and directed all six episodes of The Creep Tapes season 1 (2024), a Shudder found-footage horror expanding the Creep franchise, with each installment presenting a self-contained "tape" of videographer victims hired by the portrayed by . He also directed the full six-episode season 2, which premiered on November 14, 2025, on Shudder and AMC+, incorporating new guest stars such as and maintaining the series' intimate, improvised horror style.

References

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