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Daniel Stamm
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Daniel Stamm (born April 20, 1976, in Hamburg), is a German film filmmaker. He is best known for directing the horror films The Last Exorcism (2010), 13 Sins (2014) and Prey for the Devil (2022).[1]
Key Information
Career
[edit]In June 2010, he was slated to direct Reincarnate (formerly Twelve Strangers), which was announced to be the second installment in The Night Chronicles trilogy, with the first film being Devil.[2]
Filmography
[edit]Short film
| Year | Title | Director | Writer |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | Vergessene Ritter | No | Yes |
| 2004 | Off Hollywood & Vine | Yes | No |
Feature film
| Year | Title | Director | Writer |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2008 | A Necessary Death | Yes | Yes |
| 2010 | The Last Exorcism | Yes | No |
| 2014 | 13 Sins | Yes | Yes |
| 2022 | Prey for the Devil | Yes | No |
Television
| Year | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2014 | Intruders | 4 episodes |
| 2016 | Scream | Episode "Happy Birthday to Me" |
| Incorporated | Episode "Profit and Loss" | |
| 2017 | Fear the Walking Dead | Episode "Burning in Water, Drowning in Flame" |
| 2019 | Into the Dark | Episode "Down" |
| 2021 | Them | Episode "Day 4" |
References
[edit]- ^ Jeannette Catsoulis (2010-08-26). "Loosening the Devil's Grip in Louisiana". The New York Times.
- ^ Daniel Stamm to helm 'Reincarnate'
External links
[edit]- Daniel Stamm at IMDb
Daniel Stamm
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Early life and education
Early life in Germany
Daniel Stamm was born on April 20, 1976, in Hamburg, West Germany.[6] He spent his early years in the city, where he developed an initial fascination with media and communication.[7] As a teenager, Stamm hosted a local radio show, which allowed him to explore storytelling and engage with audiences through broadcasting.[1] He also served as editor of a youth magazine, further nurturing his interest in narrative creation and content production during his formative years in Hamburg.[8] These early experiences highlighted his budding passion for media, setting the stage for his later pursuits abroad. Following his teenage years, Stamm worked as a peace worker in Belfast, Northern Ireland. He then pursued formal film education at the Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg in Ludwigsburg, Germany, where he studied drama and screenwriting. During his time there, he directed a TV movie that earned a nomination for a prestigious German media award and a documentary about musician Nick Cave.[1][9]Education in the United States
Motivated by his early interests in media production during his teenage years in Germany, where he hosted a radio show and edited a youth magazine, Daniel Stamm relocated to Los Angeles to pursue advanced film studies.[9] He enrolled in the American Film Institute (AFI) Conservatory's directing program, a rigorous two-year Master of Fine Arts (MFA) workshop that emphasizes hands-on training in visual storytelling, script analysis, actor collaboration, and narrative development through collaborative film productions.[9][10] Stamm completed the program and graduated in 2004 as part of AFI's class of 2004.[10] The directing workshop culminated in a thesis film project, a short production that demonstrated his ability to integrate directing techniques with cinematographic elements. This work received a nomination for the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) student award, recognizing outstanding student achievement in visual storytelling and marking a pivotal milestone in Stamm's academic journey by validating his emerging technical skills in crafting compelling cinematic narratives.[9][1]Professional career
Beginnings in film and television
After completing his education at the Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg, Daniel Stamm began his professional career in film by directing the 1999 documentary short Loverman's Verse: Nick Cave on the Love Song, co-directed with Kilian von Keyserlingk.[11][12] The film documents Australian musician Nick Cave's teaching engagement at the Vienna Poetry School, offering his insights on the love song genre. Produced on a modest budget in Germany, it premiered at film festivals and highlighted Stamm's early interest in music-driven narratives and documentary storytelling.[13] In 2000, Stamm transitioned to narrative fiction by writing the screenplay for the short film Vergessene Ritter (Lost Knights), a 15-minute fantasy-horror piece directed by Thomas Grampp and produced by the Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg.[14][15] Set in a medieval-inspired world, the story follows a group of forgotten knights confronting supernatural elements, blending dark humor with genre tropes; it aired on German public television (ARD) as part of a showcase for emerging filmmakers.[16] This project marked Stamm's initial foray into scripted drama and earned positive notices for its atmospheric visuals and concise pacing within the constraints of short-form television.[17] During his studies, Stamm also authored the script for an untitled television movie that earned a nomination for the Grimme-Preis, Germany's premier award for outstanding television fiction and entertainment.[18] The nomination, announced in 2002, recognized the project's innovative approach to social themes, though specific production details remain limited in public records; it underscored Stamm's growing reputation in German media circles for thoughtful, character-driven storytelling suitable for broadcast.[9] Following his graduation from the American Film Institute (AFI) in 2004—where his thesis film was nominated for an American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) Student Heritage Award—Stamm directed the short film Off Hollywood & Vine as a bridge between his European roots and U.S.-based career.[7][11] This 20-minute drama, self-written and produced independently in Los Angeles, depicts the harsh realities of homelessness on Hollywood's fringes through the story of Travis, a teenage hustler who forms an unlikely bond with a drag queen named Mabel.[19] Filmed on location to capture the gritty underbelly of the entertainment capital, it premiered at U.S. short film festivals and served as a transitional work, honing Stamm's skills in low-budget narrative filmmaking amid his adaptation to the American industry.[20]Directing feature films
Stamm's directorial debut in feature films came with the 2008 independent production A Necessary Death, a faux documentary that follows a film student recruiting a terminally ill individual to document their planned suicide, exploring the ethical boundaries of voyeurism and mortality.[21] The film, shot on a low budget using improvised elements and compiled from over 140 video tapes to mimic raw footage, premiered at the AFI Fest where it won the audience award, marking Stamm's entry into provocative, reality-blurring horror storytelling.[21][1] His breakthrough arrived with The Last Exorcism in 2010, a mockumentary-style supernatural horror that follows a skeptical preacher documenting what he believes to be a fraudulent exorcism, only to encounter genuine terror.[22] The film's found-footage approach, emphasizing psychological tension over gore, drew praise for its clever subversion of exorcism tropes, earning a 71% approval rating from critics.[23] Commercially, it grossed over $67 million worldwide on a $1.8 million budget, establishing Stamm as a rising voice in genre cinema.[24] Shifting toward psychological thrillers, Stamm co-wrote and directed 13 Sins in 2014, a remake of the Thai film 13 Beloved that tracks a desperate salesman coerced into committing escalating acts of depravity for a massive cash prize, delving into themes of moral corruption and human limits.[4] This project showcased his experimentation with narrative structure, blending horror with dark satire to critique societal greed, though it received mixed reviews for its intensity over subtlety.[25] Stamm returned to exorcism motifs in 2022's Prey for the Devil, centering on a novice nun training to perform rites amid a surge in possessions, confronting personal trauma tied to demonic forces.[5] The film innovated by focusing on female agency in a male-dominated ritual, achieving modest commercial success with nearly $20 million in domestic earnings despite critical ambivalence toward its formulaic elements.[26][27] As of 2025, Stamm is developing projects including the long-gestating supernatural thriller Reincarnate, originally announced in 2010 as part of M. Night Shyamalan's Night Chronicles anthology and centered on a haunted jury, with no confirmed production timeline. In 2025, Stamm directed the supernatural horror film Winthrop, starring Carla Gugino and Lou Taylor Pucci, based on an episode from the Knifepoint Horror podcast.[28][29]Work in television series
Stamm's transition to directing episodes for American television series began in 2014 with his work on the BBC America horror-thriller Intruders, a serialized drama centered on a secret society pursuing immortality through body possession. He directed four episodes of the series' single season, including "The Crossing Place" and "There Is No End," bringing his feature film background in found-footage horror to infuse tense, atmospheric storytelling within the episodic format.[30][31][32] In 2016, Stamm expanded into slasher and sci-fi genres, directing the "Happy Birthday to Me" episode of MTV's Scream season 2, which heightened suspense through birthday-themed kills and character-driven terror in the vein of the franchise's meta-horror roots. That same year, he helmed the "Profit and Loss" episode of Syfy's Incorporated, a dystopian series exploring corporate espionage in a divided future America, where his direction emphasized psychological tension and moral ambiguity amid high-stakes intrigue.[33] Stamm's involvement in post-apocalyptic narratives continued in 2017 with the direction of "Burning in Water, Drowning in Flame," the fifth episode of AMC's Fear the Walking Dead season 3, which delved into survival dynamics and interpersonal conflicts within the zombie outbreak setting, showcasing his ability to balance action sequences with emotional depth under television's production constraints.[34] Returning to anthology horror in 2019, Stamm directed "Down," the fifth installment of Hulu's Into the Dark, a Valentine's Day-themed episode trapping two coworkers in an elevator, evolving from romantic tension to visceral horror through claustrophobic pacing and unexpected twists.[35] His television contributions culminated in 2021 with the direction of "Day 4" in Amazon Prime Video's Them: Covenant, the first season of the social horror anthology examining a Black family's 1950s Los Angeles struggles against racism and supernatural threats; the episode's focus on familial resilience and psychological dread contributed to the series' critical praise for its unflinching portrayal of historical trauma.[36][37]Filmography
Feature films
-
A Necessary Death (2008)
Directed and written by Daniel Stamm. Premiered at South by Southwest Film Festival and distributed by Indieflix.[38] -
The Last Exorcism (2010)
Directed by Daniel Stamm. Written by Huck Botko and Andrew Gurland. Premiered at Los Angeles Film Festival and distributed by Lionsgate.[3] -
13 Sins (2014)
Directed by Daniel Stamm. Co-written by Daniel Stamm and David Birke. Premiered at South by Southwest (SXSW) and distributed by Radius-TWC.[39] -
Prey for the Devil (2022)
Directed by Daniel Stamm. Written by Robert Zappia. Distributed by Lionsgate.[40] -
Reincarnate (TBA)
Directed by Daniel Stamm. Produced by M. Night Shyamalan's Night Chronicles.[28]
Television episodes
- Intruders (BBC America, Season 1, 2014): Directed episodes 4 ("Bound"), 5 ("The Crossing Place"), 7 ("The Shepherds and the Fox"), and 8 ("There Is No End").[41][30][42][31]
- Scream (MTV, Season 2, Episode 4: "Happy Birthday to Me", 2016): Directed by Daniel Stamm.
- Incorporated (Syfy, Season 1, Episode 5: "Profit and Loss", 2016): Directed by Daniel Stamm.[33]
- Fear the Walking Dead (AMC, Season 3, Episode 5: "Burning in Water, Drowning in Flame", 2017): Directed by Daniel Stamm.[34]
- Into the Dark (Hulu, Season 1, Episode 5: "Down", 2019): Directed by Daniel Stamm.[35]
- Them (Amazon Prime Video, Season 1, Episode 3: "Day 4", 2021): Directed by Daniel Stamm.[36]
