The Nick Taylor Horror Show

American Nightmare Studios

Exploring the techniques, strategies, and key pieces of advice for aspiring horror directors, straight from the minds of some of the greatest filmmakers and creators in horror. Host Nick Taylor engages in one-on-one conversations with directors, producers, writers, actors and artists to uncover the keys to their creative and professional success in the horror business.

  1. TRAUMATIKA Director | Pierre Tsigaridis

    1D AGO

    TRAUMATIKA Director | Pierre Tsigaridis

    Pierre Tsigaridis is the filmmaker behind such indie horror films as Two Witches and Traumatika. Pierre is a quadruple threat as he writes, directs, DPs, and edits his own movies, and in this episode he breaks down the making of Traumatika, a very brutal possession story and exploration of trauma and abuse. Fair warning, the movie is called Traumatika so you can expect that we dive into darker than usual subject matter in this episode. So, without further ado, here is Pierre Tsigaridis. Key TakeawaysHook the audience up front.Traumatika is a movie that goes for your throat at the jump. Not waiting to build up suspense or believability, this movie eventually goes to 11 but starts around 6 or 7. For newer and indie filmmakers you sometimes need to cater to the waning attention span of viewers by hooking them in the very beginning. You need to remember that you’re competing with a lot of other movies and if the viewer isn’t immediately hooked, sometimes they can move on. The implications of this may be unfortunate but doing this can make for a very impactful movie. So don’t ask permission to scare, just go for it. Foreign horror movies usually do this very well. Of course this depends on the type of movie you’re trying to make and sometimes you need a slow burn, but other times, you gotta just go for the jugular up front. There’s no limits to the amount of hats you can wear.Pierre wrote/produced/directed/shot/edited and even funded Traumatika. Doing this essentially makes him unstoppable as a filmmaker. His reasoning is practical: micro-budgets and fractured schedules mean you need to be able to pick up a camera and continue the movie even when people or days fall through. Being able to do all of this yourself simplifies scheduling, but can still be physically and mentally taxing, or as Pierre said, “the only thing that can stop me is my back.” Remember though, pain is temporary but cinema is forever. Light sets allow for dark explorations.Traumatika explores extremely dark subject matter, like REALLY DARK. Pierre was able to go there with his actors and get extremely gut-wrenching performances out of them because they trusted him and because he ran a supportive set. Pierre’s process included constant check-ins and letting actors shape choices. By setting up such an insulated and supportive set, the actors were actually able to go even deeper into the dark material as Pierre claimed that some of the most disturbing ideas were suggested by the actors. The big lesson: if you create a respectful and supportive environment and listen, actors will often take you further than you planned and they’ll feel ownership instead of pressure. Yes, we all know how Stanley Kubrick got the performance he did out of Shelly Duvall in The Shining, but despite how amazing that performance is, the method was abusive and should be forgotten. The real key to going super dark is creating a super safe space. Show NotesMovies and Shows MentionedTraumatikaThe Grudge (Japanese version)The Ring (Japanese and American versions referenced)ScreamHalloweenThe ExorcistEvil DeadNosferatuThe DescentThe Lord of the RingsCastle FreakPulse (also referenced by its original title Kairo)A Tale of Two SistersMulholland DriveLost HighwayInland EmpireTwin PeaksTwin Peaks: The ReturnManiac (1980)The Texas Chain Saw MassacreHenry: Portrait of a Serial Killer Follow Pierre Tsigaridis at:IMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm8705238/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pierretsiga/X (Twitter): https://x.com/PTsigaridisFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/pierre.tsigaridis/

    1h 9m
  2. THE BLACK PHONE 2 Composer | Atticus Derrickson

    FEB 27

    THE BLACK PHONE 2 Composer | Atticus Derrickson

    Atticus Derrickson is a composer and music producer who recently scored The Black Phone 2. He is also the son of Scott Derrickson, director of both Black Phone movies, Sinister, and many others. In this conversation, Atticus and I get into composing horror scores, how to achieve fear through sound design, and much much more. Show NotesMovies and TV Mentioned The Black Phone 2The Black PhoneSinisterV/H/S 85SmileThe WitchThe LighthouseShadow Crawler (Short) People & Artists Mentioned Christopher YoungTangerine DreamVangelisCliff MartinezMark Korven (including his “Apprehension Engine”)Throbbing GristleChris Carter (Throbbing Gristle member referenced in gear discussion)Ulver (band whose music is used in the Sinister tapes discussion)Scott DerricksonJoe HillAdam HendricksLou Ford (editor)Luciano (sound designer)Marina Moore (string player)Robert Eggers Gear and Music Tech Mentioned Prophet synthesizer, including Prophet-5 and Prophet-10John Carpenter style synthCrystallizer pedal recreation from Dirt Monger InstrumentsLogic Pro XCanter reel (used to create drone textures)Dulcimer (used in experimentation)Atmos and surround mixing formats, including 5.1 Physical Media Waxwork Records vinyl release for The Black Phone 2 soundtrack Key TakeawaysStart early and let tone guide the whole production. Atticus began writing tonal score pieces before the script was even finished. That let production carry his music into the shoot, so the score could help dictate direction. A lot of those early pieces ended up in the final film because they already lived inside the world of the story—and inside the director’s head. This is why Atticus recommends avoiding temp tracks: they can be a trap, tying you to a specific (often derivative) sound instead of pushing you toward something new. Working this far upstream also allows for a more holistic approach to scoring the film. The tone and feeling of Black Phone 2 is one of the things that made it so distinctive, and a big reason is that the score was completely original rather than shaped by temp music. Merge score and sound design for unified texture. Atticus describes a constant collaboration with the sound designer and mixer so elements like static, wind, and snowy ambience could interlock with the music instead of competing with it. The goal was one cohesive system—where sound design and score feel like the same organism. As a result, the movie has a very strong sense of surrealism that makes you feel like you’re in a very beautiful nightmare. Protect what’s working. Atticus told a story about a final music cue that had to be shortened to fit the edit. When he tried to cut it down, he realized it damaged the overall effect, so he fought to keep the full cue intact—and won. As a result, the scene works beautifully. Whether it’s a music cue or any other element, sometimes something is perfect as-is and it’s the surrounding pieces that need to be reshaped to support it. When something is working, protect it. Follow Atticus Derrickson at:IMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm12279894/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/atticusderricksonSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/1ZAQG5e9sxTTkxKjr5OcLs?si=bT32GgkJTpKHqThqabqT1A

    55 min
  3. Horror Hangout | Whitney Moore

    FEB 24

    Horror Hangout | Whitney Moore

    Whitney Moore is an actress, writer, director, and lifelong horror fan whose work spans indie genre films, hosting, and original creative projects. Whitney is known for her sharp perspective on horror culture, including her time hosting Bloody Disgusting’s This Week in Horror. She has also appeared in films such as Birdemic: Shock and Terror, Satanic Panic, and most recently, Bennie Safdie’s The Smashing Machine. In this episode, Whitney and I geek out about all things horror, including our favorite gateway horror, what’s shocked each of us recently, and why body horror resonates as strongly as it does in today’s culture. On today’s episode of The Nick Taylor Horror Show, please give it up for Whitney Moore. Show NotesMovies MentionedThe Smashing MachineBring Her BackHenry: Portrait of a Serial KillerEvil Dead RiseThe MonkeyThe Blackcoat’s DaughterI Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the HousePoltergeistChild’s PlayScream (franchise)It (new entry referenced via trailers)Five Nights at Freddy’sAre You Afraid of the Dark? (series)Who Framed Roger RabbitThe GooniesThe Addams Family (animated films referenced)Hotel Transylvania (franchise referenced)ZootopiaFallout (series)Twin Peaks (series)Lost HighwayHumanist Vampire Seeking Consenting Suicidal PersonThe Ugly Stepsister28 Years LaterBone TempleMay (2002)ValentineHeart EyesNatural Born KillersReady or NotAbigailM3GANM3GAN 2.0Drag Me to HellSend HelpPrimateChimp Crazy (docuseries)Tiger King (docuseries)The Cove (documentary)Flipper (referenced via dolphin trainer context)JawsPlan 9 from Outer Space Books and ResourcesCarl Jung and “shadow work” (discussed as a framework for horror and self-understanding)David Lynch book on Transcendental Meditation Follow Whitney Moore at:Website: https://www.gimmemoore.com/What’sGood, Whitney’s newsletter: https://www.gimmemoore.com/joinIMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm3179972/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/whitneysmoore/X (Twitter): https://x.com/tweetneymooreFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/mooreofwhitney/

    1 hr
  4. NO ME SIGAS | Directors Eduardo Lecuona & Ximena García Lecuona

    FEB 20

    NO ME SIGAS | Directors Eduardo Lecuona & Ximena García Lecuona

    Eduardo Lecuona and Ximena García Lecuona are the writer/director duo behind the Blumhouse found footage/narrative hybrid film No Me Sigas, which translates to Do Not Follow Me. No Me Sigas is Blumhouse's first original Spanish-language horror film, a Mexican supernatural thriller that follows Carla, an aspiring influencer, who fakes hauntings in her apartment for viral fame, only to accidentally summon a real malevolent entity that blurs the line between staged content and genuine terror. The film blends narrative filmmaking with a found footage–style mixed media approach, including social media footage, security cams, and iPhone footage, among more. No Me Sigas is now streaming exclusively on Hulu. In this episode, Eduardo and Ximena talk about their approach to analog horror and modern found footage, as well as their extensive and fascinating process for paranormal research, which included attending live witchcraft rituals. On today’s episode of The Nick Taylor Horror Show, here, without further ado, are Eduardo Lecuona and Ximena García Lecuona. Key TakeawaysResearch isn’t just facts—it’s proximity.Ximena didn’t just watch videos and read books about the paranormal. She went to rituals, talked with real witches, met shamans, and witnessed a ceremony involving a possessed doll. That lived exposure helped her build lore with details that feel internalized instead of invented. When your film touches a subculture or belief system, respectful proximity (conversations, observation, participation when appropriate) often yields better story texture than Wikipedia. Scares are designed three times: pre-pro, production, and post.The team literally named their scares in the shot list (“closet scare,” “phone scare”), and on set they gave those moments extra priority and extra time. But in the edit, they realized everything could change, as sound and music can entirely reshape how a scare lands. As a horror filmmaker, scares are one of the most important elements to get right, so you should take extra care to plan them out as thoroughly as possible. In matters of the occult, set culture matters.The filmmakers both come from spiritual families and, as a result, did lengthy protection rituals before shooting in famously haunted buildings in Mexico City. Regardless of anyone’s personal beliefs, this kind of practice can unify a crew psychologically by reinforcing the idea that “we’re protected, we’re intentional, we’re respectful.” Spirituality and the supernatural can be highly charged subject matter, and crew members will likely have a mixture of beliefs. It’s important to establish rituals of care—spiritual, practical, or both—whether denominational or not. Managing spiritual morale can be just as important as managing physical well-being. Show NotesMovies and Shows MentionedParanormal Caught on CameraThe Texas Chain Saw MassacreThe Blair Witch ProjectParanormal ActivityCannibal HolocaustMan Finds TapeDream EaterShelby OaksAnnabelleChuckyThe ConjuringNinja ScrollPaprikaAkiraPerfect BlueGrave of the FirefliesMexican influencer Carlos Na, referenced as a real-world inspiration point for paranormal faking Follow Eduardo Lecuona at:IMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm5280326/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pollolec/ Follow Ximena García Lecuona at:IMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm8581206/Instagram: https://instagram.com/ximenena_/X (Twitter): https://x.com/xime_lecuona

    26 min
  5. MISDIRECTION’S Kevin Lewis & Oliver Trevena

    FEB 13

    MISDIRECTION’S Kevin Lewis & Oliver Trevena

    Kevin Lewis and Oliver Trevena are the director and producer duo behind Misdirection, a contained neo noir thriller with Frank Grillo that builds a surprisingly big world inside a single location. Misdirection follows a couple driven to carry out a series of high-end heists to pay off a dangerous mob debt. When their latest break-in spirals out of control, the pair find themselves caught in a web of secrets, deception, and deadly consequences. Misdirection is now available on Digital from Cineverse. Shot in Serbia over fifteen nights on a small budget, the film is a case study in fast prep, actor focused directing, and the kind of persistence it takes to pull an indie feature across the finish line. Here, without further ado, are Kevin Lewis and Oliver Trevena. Key TakeawaysRelentlessness is a producing skill, not a personality trait. Misdirection went through consistent bouts of turbulence. Funding gaps, broken promises, Murphy’s Law persisted all the way up to roughly five days before shooting. Oliver was told by multiple people to forget about the project and let it go, but he didn’t. The takeaway is that persistence isn’t just motivational jargon, it’s a core production competency. If the producer stops pushing, the movie collapses. Misdirection took years to get off the ground, and the film only exists because Oliver and Kevin refused to let it die. Many people think movies are bought and sold based on the market itself, but that’s not always the case. Sometimes beating a movie into production through sheer will and force is the only path forward. Speed unlocks instinct. Shooting in fifteen nights removed hesitation. With no time to overthink, decisions became intuitive and committed. That urgency created momentum and helped performances and directorial choices feel alive rather than labored. It’s always ideal to have more time, but there’s creativity in limitations, and some casts and crews work better under pressure. Prep is freedom: obsess early so you can adapt fast later. Thrillers demand airtight logic. Kevin mapped character movement, information reveals, and physical continuity in advance so nothing unraveled under pressure. Thorough prep made the fast pace possible. Kevin calls himself a “big prepper”—months of notes, multiple contingency plans (A/B/C/D), then recalibrating once they were on set. He also describes basically hermitting in his hotel room instead of socializing because every hour on set equals money. The lesson isn’t to “be rigid”—it’s the opposite: deep prep lets you pivot without breaking story logic when the location or constraints change. As Churchill said, plans can be useless but the act of planning can be priceless. Show NotesMovies and Projects MentionedMisdirectionParadox EffectJohn WickWick Is Pain (John Wick documentary)Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?DriveWerewolves Follow Kevin Lewis at:IMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0507425/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kevinlewisofficial Follow Oliver Trevena at:IMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm3165541/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/olivertrevena/Website: ollywoodmedia.com

    49 min
  6. STRANGE HARVEST Director, Stuart Ortiz

    FEB 6

    STRANGE HARVEST Director, Stuart Ortiz

    Stuart Ortiz is a film director, writer, producer and one of the founding members of The Vicious Brothers, the filmmaking duo behind Grave Encounters 1 and 2. Stuart’s most recent feature is Strange Harvest, a true-crime–styled, found footage film he wrote and directed. Strange harvest is a serial-killer faux documentary that effectively weaponizes the aesthetics of Netflix true-crime docs by luring you into a false reality with a familiar documentary style then turning up the horror with deeply unsettling imagery that looks and most importantly, feels very real. It’s certainly one of the most unflinching and innovative found footage movies in recent years and has earned plenty of special praise for its naturalistic performances, grisly practical effects and overall dread. In this conversation, Stuart and I get into his career history, the making of Strange Harvest and how to execute modern found footage with high impact and a low budget, on today’s episode of The Nick Taylor Horror Show. Without further ado, here is Strange Harvest Director, Stuart Ortiz. Key TakeawaysEmbrace CGI strategically as a problem solver. A lot of purist horror cinephiles grumble at the use of CGI, and I agree that it shouldn’t be overused—but it also shouldn’t be avoided, because it can solve colossal problems. The pool scene is a perfect case study: filling an Olympic-sized pool would have required roughly 35,000 gallons of water, which was both budget-killing and ethically questionable during a drought. Instead, Stuart used VFX to build the water and environment, and it wasn’t even all that expensive. Use CGI where it’s the cleanest solution to a real-world constraint, and save practical effects for what sells the tactile reality. Indie budgeting is often about where you don’t spend. Stuart minimized spending on a large crew, expensive cameras, and elaborate lighting because the format called for rough, archival-style imagery and on-the-fly filmmaking. Instead, he spent heavily where failure would be fatal: special FX makeup, which made up about 15–20% of the budget. He knew horror audiences would be especially scrutinizing when it came to effects (and he was right), so he spent disproportionately in that area—and it clearly paid off. Budgeting a movie can be complicated, but Strange Harvest proves that it’s important to spend where you’ll get the highest return on your investment. Wear more hats than you’re used to. Stuart states that it’s unrealistic for directors to “just” direct nowadays, especially on micro-budgets. Strange Harvest exists largely because Stuart didn’t just direct—he also wrote, edited, and produced the film. On top of that, much of the crew wore multiple hats across the board, which is ultimately how the movie was able to get made. It may not be glamorous, but it’s how movies actually get finished. Show NotesMovies and Shows MentionedStrange HarvestGrave EncountersLake MungoThe Poughkeepsie TapesTiger KingThe Blair Witch ProjectGhostbustersGhostbusters 2True Detective Season 1The Wall (Pink Floyd film)The RitualHellraiser (newer entry referenced via makeup artist credits)The Dark Knight (referenced via production design work)The VaultThe Black Phone (mask design reference)Heart Eyes (mask design reference) PodcastsMy Favorite Murder Follow Stuart Ortiz at:IMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm3425513/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stuart_ortizX (Twitter): https://x.com/StuartLOrtizWebsite: https://stuartortiz.com/

    55 min
  7. MAN FINDS TAPE Directors, Peter Hall and Paul Gandersman

    JAN 23

    MAN FINDS TAPE Directors, Peter Hall and Paul Gandersman

    Peter Hall and Paul Gandersman are the writer/directors behind Man Finds Tape, a faux documentary horror film that uses mixed media, curated “evidence,” and found footage logic to tell a cosmic horror story about a malevolent force that overtakes a small town. In this episode, Peter and Paul break down how the making of Man Finds Tape, including how they approached the cinematic language of using a multitude of different types of cameras and filmmaking styles to achieve their signature blend of found footage and cinematic surrealism. On today’s episode of The Nick Taylor Horror Show, here, without further ado, are Peter Hall and Paul Gandersman. Key TakeawaysTake what your actors give you. Paul and Peter discuss a situation where their actors came to a character meeting so well prepared that they as directors were able to sit back and let the actors figure out all of the backstory themselves. The actors braistormed without their involvement for about an hour and did a ton of heavy lifting. More egotistical directors would have stepped in and asserted themselves but Paul and Peter had the good sense to realize that their actors were locked into their characters to such a high degree and they let them drive. When this happens it’s magic, but so many people ruin it by being precious. This is a two part lesson, one, hire actors who can also be collaborators and 2, when they start figuring things out on their own, give them ownership and get the f**k out of their way. Target personal fears, over generic scares. Peter and Paul mentioned a term I’d never heard before, trypophobia which is an intense, irrational fear or disgust triggered by looking at clusters of small holes, bumps, or intricate, repetitive patterns. They integrated this fear and unease into their body horror effects and even though I didn’t have this phobia before, I think I might it after watching this movie. There’s something very effective about tapping into irrational and obscure fears because they’re more common than you think. Human beings have all kinds of evolutionary neurosis that you can explore and exploit as a filmmaker to give your movies a surgical level of unease. This is a fascinating and fertile ground to harvest and worth studying. Tone and vibe over exposition. The movie has a masterfully constructed tone of dread that is very singular to Man Finds Tape. Constructing a frequency for your movie that’s this sharp and affecting is one of the most challenging aspects of filmmaking, and it’s on full display here. Peter and Paul discussed how when they were editing the movie, they focused more on the feeling the movie would evoke, rather than getting bogged down in plot specifics or exposition. Ultimately, your audience will reflect on how the movie made them feel instead of what the plot revealed. David Lynch is a master of doing this; evoking feeling without having much concern for exposition. Show NotesMovies MentionedMan Finds TapeLake MungoThe Blair Witch ProjectV/H/SShelby OaksDream EaterStrange Harvest28 Years LaterSomething in the DirtPsychoThe ShiningHarry and the HendersonsBest in ShowThis Is Spinal TapNinja Scroll Books and ResourcesJunji ItoH. P. LovecraftTim Ehl’s liminal videos on InstagramSouth by Southwest documentary reference: Capturing Bigfoot Follow Peter Hall at:IMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm4296678/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/peterhallhumanX (Twitter): https://x.com/PeterHallHuman Follow Paul Gandersman at:IMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2821596/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/paulgandersman/X (Twitter): https://x.com/Paul_Gandersman

    1h 13m
  8. GOOD BOY Director, Ben Leonberg

    JAN 9

    GOOD BOY Director, Ben Leonberg

    Ben Leonberg is the writer and director of Good Boy, the breakout indie horror film told entirely from the point of view of a dog. Shot over three years with a crew of three people and made for under seventy thousand dollars, Good Boy became a theatrical and streaming success, earning over $8 million at the box office, mostly due to its inventiveness, emotional depth, and commitment to a single, bold idea. In this episode, Ben tells us the whole story behind Good Boy, from humble beginnings to box office breakout. He also gets into the details behind shooting horror from a dog’s point of view, the critical importance of sound design in horror, and the practical lessons he learned while shooting more than four hundred days with his dog Indie. Here are some key takeaways from this conversation with Ben Leonberg. Limitations can be a feature, not a bugBen’s process making Good Boy was a masterclass in embracing creative limitations. From directing a dog who couldn’t take cues, to shooting without a traditional crew, all while working within a $70,000 budget, Ben built the film around his constraints instead of fighting them. He followed the classic Robert Rodriguez rule: write the movie around what you already have. In Ben’s case, that meant a dog and an old cabin. He and his wife shot most of the movie themselves, structuring the entire production around their available resources. The mindset of designing a film around what you can uniquely do is a powerful model for indie filmmakers. In Ben’s case, those constraints led to a strikingly original idea: a horror movie told entirely from the perspective of a dog. That single choice shaped every creative decision; camera height, lensing, blocking, editing, sound, and pacing. What began as a limitation became the film’s identity. Sound is vital for horrorAs we’ve covered many times, in horror, sound goes a long way, and Jennifer Kent, Director of The Babadook, even says it’s just as important as your visuals. In Good Boy, which had minimal traditional exposition or visual cues, sound became essential—not just for scares, but for tone, tension, and atmosphere. Composer Sam Boutilier went so far as to build a custom instrument to create the film’s signature eerie, otherworldly tones that had never been heard before. For horror filmmakers working with limited budgets, sound design isn’t just a finishing touch but an opportunity to elevate the entire film. A long production timeline can be an advantageThe film was shot over three years, across more than 400 shoot days. With such a small team and total control over gear and scheduling, Ben was able to work slowly and deliberately, testing ideas, reshooting scenes, refining edits, and evolving the movie over the course of years. In most productions, time is the scarcest and most expensive resource. But when you own the entire timeline, time becomes your biggest asset because it gives you the space to problem-solve creatively, discover better choices, and polish your film beyond the limits of its budget. Show NotesMovies MentionedGood BoyPoltergeistThe ShiningPsychoJawsRaiders of the Lost ArkDuelDrag Me to HellThe InnocentsSmileOne BedroomIn a Violent Nature101 Dalmatians Follow Ben Leonberg at:IMBd: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm3828044/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ben_leonberg/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ben-leonberg-ab797556/Website: https://www.benleonberg.com/

    51 min
5
out of 5
17 Ratings

About

Exploring the techniques, strategies, and key pieces of advice for aspiring horror directors, straight from the minds of some of the greatest filmmakers and creators in horror. Host Nick Taylor engages in one-on-one conversations with directors, producers, writers, actors and artists to uncover the keys to their creative and professional success in the horror business.

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