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  1. Aug 14, 2020 · He’s messed up, but no more than the cartoonish dickheads that become his victims. Despite its criticism of social media culture, Spree is never patronising.

  2. Spree is the kind of message-heavy film that reflects reality in its own messed up, occasionally satirical way. Kurt, a Gen Z dude, is desperate about going viral on his video-streaming account and decides to take things one step too far.

  3. I've only watched some of the influencer themed horror that's been rolling out of the western indie horror scene the last few years. Spree has a very strong lead that commits fully to the role along with naturally fitting comedy going for it. I liked it more than others, Sissy for example.

  4. Aug 13, 2020 · Most radically, “Spree” rejects any entry point for empathy or understanding into Kurt. He’s impossible to latch onto, and Koltyarenko makes an emotional entry point for Kurt impossible to find.

  5. Aug 14, 2020 · Pathetic meets psychotic in “Spree,” a black comedy that pretends it’s an assault on social media. But, instead, it is probably more interested in getting likes and follows by using that culture...

  6. Jan 27, 2020 · In the strange new horror-comedy-cautionary-tale, “Spree,” which premiered Friday at the Sundance Film Festival, Kurt (Joe Keery), a caffeinated ride-share driver, turns into a serial killer ...

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  8. Aug 12, 2020 · Spree recreates a fictional mass murder from start to finish, with the killer as eerily affable guide. As such, it’s a deliberately lurid viewing experience.

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