you're way too pretty to be single
i'm not ok in the head
One Nice Bug Per Day
ojovivo
YOU ARE THE REASON
Monterey Bay Aquarium
wallacepolsom
Peter Solarz
Claire Keane
trying on a metaphor

Love Begins
Misplaced Lens Cap
Sade Olutola
🪼

ellievsbear
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Keni

Kiana Khansmith
art blog(derogatory)

Product Placement
Sweet Seals For You, Always

PR's Tumblrdome
seen from Switzerland
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@meadow-muffins
you're way too pretty to be single
i'm not ok in the head
are you free tonight
i woul do anything to be free
A dream of the fields
study
This reminds me so much of these pictures I took a few years ago! https://www.tumblr.com/geopsych/183911018182/the-day-the-cat-appeared Edit: I think the art "A dream of the fields" is super cute!
"Perversion" ou "Femme aux Cornes et aux Griffes" eau-forte, vernis mou et gravure au soufre de Valère Bernard (1895) à l'exposition "Sorcières (1860-1920) : Fantasmes, Savoirs, Liberté" du Musée de Pont-Aven, Bretagne, septembre 2025.
Everyone’s interpreting “Nfwmb” as Hozier being protective of his baby like she’s delicate, but maybe the intent is different. Nothing fucks with her because she’s tough, scary, even, like a goddess ushering in the apocalypse. The end slouching toward Bethlehem stops when it gets a good look at her. The sound of corpses rolling in their graves excites her, she is warmed by the world burning, she cremates her dead enemies. Listen to the uncertainty in his voice when he sings, “Ain’t you my baby?” Nothing fucks with his baby, but he doesn’t have anything to do with that.
This is the official website of Mike Flanagan, writer/director of The Fall of the House of Usher, Midnight Mass, Doctor Sleep, The Haunting
My new website! I'll be posting updates on all projects there first, then on my Blue Sky account, which is linked in the header of the new site. (It also includes a real-time feed from my Tumblr, so I think I'm creating a feedback loop by posting this here but that's okay) Hope you enjoy!
Hey Mike!
I was wondering, when you write a character with a specific actor in mind, are you ever surprised by the direction they take it? Have there been times where an actor will bring something out of the page you didn’t know was there?
Oh, all the time. It's one of my favorite things. A great example of this was Henry Thomas in The Fall of the House of Usher. I thought I knew generally where Henry would take the character, and was writing it for that, but when he arrived on set and presented his version of Frederick, I was absolutely delighted and gobsmacked. I never, ever imagined the character that way, but he did, and it was absolutely incredible to watch it develop. Same with Kate as Camille. That show, actually, was full of surprises when it came to performances. I thought I knew what I'd get out of people but everyone was stretching and taking risks, and it was so exciting and entertaining to watch.
On my periodic flanagan binge so the questions keep coming. Hopefully I don’t make you regret having an open ask box.
I’ve been absolutely entranced by your use of Holly Holy in MM. No joke, I’ve been listening to the song on repeat and keep seeing the shots of people standing in the pews in my head. I learned the chord progressions so I could see how the modulations worked to keep raising the tension, and how the structure of the song supports the structure of the montage.
I know you’re always coming at projects from the perspective of the edit, so I gotta know: how much of the Holly Holy montage was baked into the script? Because it’s absolutely perfect and I feel like it was designed incredibly purposefully
"Holly Holy" was baked into Midnight Mass almost from the start. I started listening to the song on repeat and imagining the montage sometime back in 2015, and even before we had major plot points figured out for the show, or ever had a studio or a writers room, I had the "Holly Holy" sequence. As far as the script goes, I'd say it was very, very specific about how the song had to be used. Enjoy!
With the 4K Hush coming next week, and not having watched it yet (despite having a, uh, version of it on my self that I acquired along with a similar one of Midnight Mass), I was wondering which version you'd recommend to start with?
It appears you prefer the "Shush" cut, so that's what I was planning on going right to, but perhaps you think the original should be checked out before the variant. Just wondering, thanks.
I personally prefer the Shush Cut - it's the way Kate and I had originally wanted the movie to be, so the closest to the true intent. They're both fun for different reasons, but what the hell - I think starting with the Shush Cut is pretty damn cool.
Hi Mike! Recently I was scrolling through your page and saw recently you said the only reason why hamish wasn’t in usher was because he was busy with other projects and how I have to ask, aside from the phenomenal cast usher already has what character would you have casted him as? Just curious!
My initial thought was that Hamish would play Frederick Usher, and Henry Thomas would play Arthur Pym. When Hamish wasn't available, we re-conceived Frederick for Henry (and his performance was one of the most thrilling surprises of the series for me), and Mark Hamill came into my life to play Pym, which I would not trade for the world. So while I very much missed having Hamish on set, I'm really thrilled with the way it all worked out. Hamish is beyond terrific and I know we'll work together again.
mike flanagan are you at the enzian
... I don't know what that is! UPDATE: According to the comments, it is "a fabulous indie film theater in central Florida"... nope, I am not there, and have not been there. But it sounds great!
Hi Mike, hope you’re doing well!
I noticed it’s been a while since you’ve released a new episode of Director’s Commentary, is the show just taking a hiatus? I’m a big fan :) thanks!
Hi there! I'm not sure when we'll go back to recording episodes - the show didn't quite catch on as much as we'd hoped, and I'm currently in prep on a major job, so it may be quite a long time. I enjoyed doing it, so hopefully it's not over forever!
Coming to theaters this summer, courtesy of NEON.
Dear Mike,
I'm writing my first novel, a horror story about giant cicadas that hypnotise people into moulting. It's a metaphor for drug addiction. In my opinion, horror is its best when it's also a commentary, or a reflection, on something real that afflicts society, like capitalism, xenophobia, or intergenerational trauma. I'm nearly 6 months clean, and though it wasn't my intention, this book is helping me come to terms with how bad things were, and how hard I had to work to get out of that life.
You tackle a lot of the toughest parts of the human experience in your work: loss and grief, mental illness, addiction, trauma, recovery... How do you write about those things without falling too deep into memories of what they felt like? My creative writing professor says there's no place for grief in horror, but I know she's dead wrong. My novice guess is that drawing from experience to make a character's trials feel more "real" makes their stories more immersive and empathetic. What do you think? Do you have any advice for how to emotionally detach for your characters, or how to balance grief and terror in a story?
Thank you, FĂona
Hi Fiona, First, a huge congratulations on 6 months. That's an amazing feat. Second, your creative writing professor is embarrassingly wrong when she says there is no place for grief in horror. That's so wrong, in fact, it should disqualify her from teaching creative writing. (Or, perhaps this is a rare creative writing teacher who simply hasn't been exposed to Charles Dickens, Henry James, Shirley Jackson, Edgar Allan Poe, or Stephen King. Ask her to go read Don't Look Now by Daphne du Maurier, and then explain that there's no place for grief in horror. What an embarrassing thing to say.)
I don't emotionally detach from my characters at all, far from it. When it comes to truly facing my own traumas, darkness, grief, shortcomings, fears, and insecurities, I have far more courage when I'm writing than I do in day-to-day life.
It can be tough to fall too deeply into the dark places, or the memories - there's at least some measure of safety to such expeditions when I'm writing. It can be similar to the kind of safety I find in therapy. Sometimes, a character scares me because I can't relate to them at all (Beverly Keane). Other times, characters are so close to my self that it's impossible to separate them in my mind (Riley Flynn). Drawing from experience is a brave and beautiful act, and infuses your fiction with authenticity, nuance, and humanity. Best of luck with your writing. And whatever you do, don't listen to that teacher. Apologies, but she's full of shit.
"I have a question about the show The Haunting of Hill House. Do you think Luke was able to be happy and live a good life after Nell's death? I hope that with him facing his traumas and, of course, with his siblings finally believing in him, he's happier than before."
The short answer is yes. Luke finds and maintains sobriety, and lives a good life - there is happiness, and sadness, and connection, and loneliness, and victories and defeats and all of it. But the best thing that has entered Luke's life since the events of the series is a true, real sense of peace. Maybe for the first time.
Continuing to rewatch Usher and I have to ask: when Pym said he reached Ultima Thule and saw beings out of time, was he telling the truth? If so, is Verna one of the beings out of time?
Or is that just a bit of fancy or secret for yourself and the cast and crew?
Yep, and she saw him too. She wanted to watch the ship go by.
Hi Mike!
Have you seen Sinners yet?
Three times. https://letterboxd.com/flanaganfilm/film/sinners-2025/