Rachel Nichols and Britt Robertson are set to co-star in Night At The Carriage House, a psychological horror-thriller from SJ Creazzo that centers on a glamorous former Hollywood icon whose murder still hangs over an isolated estate. Nichols will play Faith E. Williams, a star whose Golden Age ascent ended in shocking violence decades ago.
That casting puts Nichols back in the search spotlight now because the film’s premise is built around a decayed Hollywood myth: fame, trauma, manipulation, and buried violence inside one historic carriage house estate. Robertson plays a beautiful but troubled rising starlet, giving the story a second lead whose ambition collides with the past that refuses to stay buried.
Creazzo is producing the film under the Dreamality Entertainment banner for Centerboro Productions, which is based in New York and Los Angeles. Todd Slater and Marilyn G. Haft are also on board as producers, and Patricia A. Beninati said both actresses bring an emotional intensity and sophistication that match the material. Creazzo said the film is “exactly the kind of elevated psychological thriller” he is drawn to, calling it intimate, emotionally raw, grounded and relentlessly suspenseful.
The unsettling part of the setup is that Faith E. Williams is long dead, yet her presence continues to haunt the estate anyway. Her tragic past remains embedded in the carriage house walls, which means Nichols is not playing a simple ghost story apparition but the center of a mystery that still shapes the living characters around her. That is the pressure point in the film’s pitch: the murder is old, but its force is still active.
For Creazzo, the project arrives after he recently completed the documentary Finding Bob Nelson: A True Story Told by an Unreliable Source, while his last film Dark Reckoning is set to release on VOD on June 7. What remains unsaid for now is the one detail viewers will want next: no release date has been confirmed for Night At The Carriage House, leaving the film’s arrival as unsettled as the estate at its center.
