A Speidi superfan made a very ‘dark’ documentary about the pair
From 2006 to 2010, Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag seemed determined to take over Hollywood.
After their stint on The Hills however, things seemed to fizzle out for the couple.
They did brave the jungle for some interesting I’m A Celeb moments. However, it doesn’t seem like they were inundated with job offers following that particular show.
If you were wondering what the pair may have been up to, or what exactly happened that derailed their rise to superstardom, then have no fear because one fan has made the ultimate documentary.
22-year old Will Rebein is a student at the Fashion Institute of Technology (yes, the same place Lauren Conrad studied) and told Bustle he put the documentary together in two weeks.
He’s been a fan since he was 15, and he got quite artsy and dark while creating the doc apparently.
He explained that influences included the Paris Hilton documentary Paris, Not France and Nip/Tuck. He also made a similar film, I’m Not Crazy about Britney Spears and Amanda Bynes.
Paper magazine tweeted about the doc and also referred to Spencer as a ‘D-list’ star. While some celebs would take offence, Spencer didn’t seem that bothered:
I feel more Z-list but whatevs https://t.co/GYmLLSZzlL
— Spencer Pratt (@spencerpratt) September 29, 2015
This seemed quite surprising considering at one point Spencer was determined to take the world by storm.
He was however upset that Will never asked for a sit-down interview. He felt that there were some crucial plot points that were under-developed without his first hand commentary:
@rehabpromises I only wish @wrebein had asked us questions during the production. So much more to the story that's not being told. #dark
— Spencer Pratt (@spencerpratt) September 18, 2015
Will seems to have paid particular attention to Heidi's transformation while her husband attempted to manipulate the media in any way he could. He told Broadly:
"Watching all the clips again, I truly realised how much Heidi had changed and had a realisation that people only paid attention to her physical change and not the emotional changes or abuse she went through."