Horror is the most craft-dependent genre there is — it lives in pacing, framing and what you don't show. Give Dreamz a premise and it directs the dread: slow builds, wrong shadows, sound that arrives a beat too late.
The agent structures escalation — normalcy, wrongness, reveal — instead of jump-scare roulette.
Fog, flicker, negative space. The unsettling kind of horror that platforms don't bury.
Room tone, silence and score are generated with the picture — half of horror is what you hear.
A consistent tone across shorts — build a horror channel with a voice, not scattered clips.
Dreamz is also a Claude connector (MCP) — describe your film to Claude and the finished video comes back in the conversation. If Claude is already your workspace, your film studio now lives there too.
Tell Dreamz about the premise, the setting, and what is quietly wrong — the story, the mood, who is in it. The director agent writes the script and casts the characters with you, in chat.
Scenes generate live on your dashboard — visuals, voices, music and editing are all handled for you, with a clear price quoted before anything is charged.
Watch the finished cut, ask for changes in plain words, then download it — everything you make is commercially yours.
Atmospheric dread, tension and unsettling reveals — the psychological end of the genre. Graphic violence and gore are outside the platform's content rules.
Because horror is pacing, and clip generators have none. Dreamz plans the whole film first — beats, escalation, when to hold a shot — then renders to that plan.
Yes — consistent tone, narrator and world rules across episodes is exactly what the story-first pipeline is for.
Quoted before rendering, priced by finished length — a few dollars for a 1–2 minute short.
Completely — festivals, YouTube, monetized channels, all yours.
Yes. Dreamz ships an official Claude connector (MCP): connect it once in Claude, then describe the video you want in any conversation — pricing quotes, drafts and the finished film are delivered right in the chat. The website and the Claude connector share the same account and pricing.
One premise. One finished nightmare.