Movies
Rachel Nichols & Britt Robertson Face Psychological Terror in ‘Night at the Carriage House’
Rachel Nichols (The Amityville Horror, P2) is returning to the horror genre in Night at the Carriage House, a new psychological thriller that also stars Britt Robertson (Scream 4).
The film is being directed by S.J. Creazzo (Dark Reckoning), who is aiming for a tense, character-driven approach to psychological horror set inside a deeply unsettling location.
According to Deadline, Night at the Carriage House unfolds within an isolated, historic carriage house estate where fame, trauma, manipulation, and buried violence begin to collide.
Britt Robertson plays a rising Hollywood starlet whose career is taking off — but behind the success is emotional instability and unresolved trauma. When she accepts what seems like a peaceful, secluded retreat, she quickly discovers the property is far from safe.
Instead, she becomes entangled in a disturbing web of secrets tied to the estate’s mysterious caretaker and the dark history embedded within its walls.
Rachel Nichols plays Faith E. Williams, a glamorous former Hollywood icon whose rise during the Golden Age ended in shocking and violent tragedy.
Though Faith was murdered decades earlier, her presence continues to linger throughout the estate. Her memory — and possibly something more — remains deeply connected to the carriage house and the horrors it hides.
Producer Patricia A. Beninati praised both lead performances, highlighting the emotional weight they bring to the project.
“Both actresses bring an undeniable emotional intensity and sophistication to the screen that perfectly matches the tone of this film,” she said. “SJ has created a suspenseful, psychologically layered story that feels both commercially compelling and deeply character driven. This is elevated horror with real emotional stakes.”
Director S.J. Creazzo also described the film as a tightly controlled psychological descent.
“Night at the Carriage House is exactly the kind of elevated psychological thriller I’m drawn to as a filmmaker,” Creazzo said. “It’s intimate, emotionally raw, grounded, and relentlessly suspenseful. Britt and Rachel bring extraordinary vulnerability, intelligence, and unpredictability to these characters, creating a dynamic that feels deeply human while becoming increasingly terrifying. The film slowly tightens like a psychological vise until the very end.”
With its isolated setting, haunted legacy, and collapsing sense of reality, Night at the Carriage House positions itself as a slow-burn psychological horror film where the past refuses to stay buried — and the house itself may be hiding more than just memories.
Some secrets, it seems, never leave the walls they were born in.
