• Home
  • Contact
Entertainment Now
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Entertainment Now
No Result
View All Result
Home Comedy

Edfringe Comedy Review: Creepy Boys: SLUGS

Nina Aspey by Nina Aspey
August 20, 2025
in Comedy, Edinburgh Festivals
4 0
0
Edfringe Comedy Review: Creepy Boys: SLUGS

SLUGS is about nothing. Nothing or something. Definitely nothing political. 

The Creepy Boys are adamant on not becoming political, they are just young artists putting on a show. They arrive in modified sleeping bags as slugs, where they have the audience pull various things out of their mouths such as bras, setting off the tone for the show. 

Related articles

Brighton Fringe Review: Cabaret Impedimenta

Cally Beaton’s Namaste Motherfckers* Returns in Paperback as UK Tour Extends Following Huge Demand

This then transforms into a visual trip, where the pair explore various distractions to prevent the play from becoming ‘something’.  

With a techno-punk rave quality to the show, the duo performs various mad songs throughout to add to the disturbance. One song about garbanzo (chickpea) beans involves a beat where one chews the beans up and the other eats them with a cracker, all to the audience’s delight and disgust. 

The whole show is panic inducing, and full of fear. It is a spectacle for the eyes and has a DIY charm to it. It turns out everything is more tolerable if you put a pair of googly eyes on it, even genitalia. 

There are aspects of puppetry, including Joni Mitchell – who they discover is a bit of a ‘b’. They also have different scenes which are projected live onto the screen. These include different silly and imaginative scenarios such as receiving a phone call on the toilet or giving birth. 

SLUGS ends hysterically, with the Creepy Boys pointing guns at the audience, after mistakenly talking about gun crime. They appear to have lost the plot as they fail to divert the audience’s attention. 

This is a howlingly good show about an unveiling existential crisis. 

Creepy Boys: SLUGS, 21:15, Red Lecture Theatre at Summerhall, until the 25th August 

SLUGS | Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Tags: reviews
Nina Aspey

Nina Aspey

Nina Aspey is a 4th year Journalism student originally from Leicester. With a love of performing arts from a young age, she enjoys reviewing a wide range of shows, particularly comedies and musicals.

Related Posts

Brighton Fringe Review: Cabaret Impedimenta

Brighton Fringe Review: Cabaret Impedimenta

by Victoria Nangle
May 23, 2026
0

A stalwart of the Weekend of Weird sub-Fringe season at The SpiegelGardens, Cabaret Impedimentia packs an enjoyably disruptive punch. The premise is simple: five professional cabaret...

Cally Beaton’s Namaste Motherfckers* Returns in Paperback as UK Tour Extends Following Huge Demand

Cally Beaton’s Namaste Motherfckers* Returns in Paperback as UK Tour Extends Following Huge Demand

by Helen Hurdman
May 22, 2026
0

Best-selling author, comedian and broadcaster Cally Beaton is continuing a remarkable second act as her Sunday Times Top 10 bestseller Namaste Motherfckers: A Modern Manifesto For Keeping Cool When...

Penn Jillette and Piff The Magic Dragon Team Up for Nine Date UK Tour

Penn Jillette and Piff The Magic Dragon Team Up for Nine Date UK Tour

by Siobhan Rowe
May 22, 2026
0

Penn Jillette and Piff The Magic Dragon are heading out on their first ever UK tour together later this year with brand-new live show Piff & Pop’s...

Brighton Fringe Review: Ben Hur

Brighton Fringe Review: Ben Hur

by Victoria Nangle
May 22, 2026
0

How? How is it possible for a cast of four (plus two incredible backstage dressers) to put on the epic tale of ‘Ben Hur’ as a...

Brighton Fringe Review: Nocturne Musical

Brighton Fringe Review: Nocturne Musical

by Victoria Nangle
May 17, 2026
0

Where Alice In Wonderland meets the Moomin trolls – but in Norway – that’s where ‘Nocturne Musical’ exists. When 12 year old nature-lover Solveig goes into...

RECOMMENDED

Celebrating Meat Loaf: Brian May, “Do not miss this!”
Music

Celebrating Meat Loaf: Brian May, “Do not miss this!”

February 17, 2023
Toloache
Music

Toloache releases new single ‘Watching Close’

October 18, 2021
Entertainment Now

Your daily fix for what is trending in entertainment.

© 2026 Entertainment Now.

  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV

© 2026 Entertainment Now.