Minimalist horror 'Undertone' uses audio and soundscapes to scare you
Minimalist horror 'Undertone' uses audio and soundscapes to scare you
LINDSEY BAHRThu, March 12, 2026 at 3:33 PM UTC
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1 / 0"Undertone" Portrait SessionDirector Ian Tuason poses for a portrait to promote the film "Undertone" on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, in West Hollywood, Calif. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello) (Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)
LOS ANGELES (AP) ā Alfred Hitchcock famously claimed he didnāt watch his films in theaters. When asked if he missed out on hearing the audience scream, he said, āNo. I can hear them scream when Iām making the picture.ā
While Ian Tuason, the mind behind the buzzy new auditory horror āUndertone,ā reveres and references Hitchcock as much as the next horror filmmaker, he has to disagree with him on this one. For Tuason, the real screams are the point.
āMy favorite thing about this whole process is just watching it with audiences. I think thatās probably why I wanted to make a horror film ⦠just to kind of witness the reactions,ā Tuason said in a recent interview with The . āThe same way as when you tell a ghost story at a campfire, it doesnāt feel that great unless you see your friend scared.ā
His debut film āUndertone,ā which opens in theaters on Friday (yes, the 13th), is already doing just that. After playing at the Sundance Film Festival, it had some calling it the āscariest movie youāll ever hear.ā
āUndertoneā is a minimalist horror, set in one location, with essentially one character. Evy (Nina Kiri) is a paranormal podcaster who is taking care of her dying, comatose mother upstairs. Sheās the skeptic of the podcast, which she does with a remote co-host (Adam DiMarco) in the middle of the night. Nothing can scare her, but this new investigation, in which they try to decode a series of unnerving audio files sent anonymously, has rattled her.
Why sound is so scary
Tuason always dreamed of being a filmmaker, but he began his career in virtual reality and made a name for himself as an early proponent of immersive 3D sound for his cinematic horror shorts, which have been viewed millions of times. Soundscapes became his calling card. So, when he sat down to write āUndertone,ā he included every audio cue, resulting in a 250-page script.
āSound in movies, it makes space for the audience to imagine what theyāre not seeing,ā Tuason said. āWhatever you imagine thatās scary is going to be way scarier than what I can show you. Thereās going to be millions of different versions of this movie in millions of minds and thatās all because of the power of suggestion driven by sound and a lot of negative space.ā
In the process of shooting, he even found himself taking out a lot of the visuals he thought heād need, stripping it down to its barest form: A woman listening to audio clips through her noise canceling headphones and freaking herself, and the audience, out. They figured it out with the help of a local Toronto postproduction studio, REDLAB. When A24 came on board to distribute the film, they were able to do the mix again in Dolby.
āItās definitely meant to be seen in the theater in Dolby, because that is the exact vision that Ian had,ā said producer Cody Calahan. āBut at home, on headphones, alone, it is a different experience ⦠You can kind of watch it twice.ā
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The personal story behind the film
Behind the film is a deeply personal story of demons, loss and grief. In 2020, during the pandemic, both his parents received terminal cancer diagnoses, and he moved back home to their Toronto suburbs to care for them. His mom died a few months later, followed by his father two and a half years later. During that time, Tuason was drinking a lot too, but also writing, melding together an audio play heād created with the story of a lone caregiver.
He wrote it figuring that heād just have to make it himself with whatever resources he had. It could be set in his childhood home (nothing to rent) and feature one actor (āI could afford that,ā he said). And he didn't hold back: Even he was surprised by his own capacity for honesty about some of his darkest moments.
āI didnāt really have to write in a way where Iām trying to pitch it,ā Tuason said. āI think thatās what gave it its honesty. Because I was going to make it either way.ā
His main character, Evy, is him, he said. But he wrote Evy as a woman and not a man because, Tuason said, he needed the character to face a choice that would change their life; He couldnāt think of anything bigger than the question of whether to have a child.
Throughout it all Tuason worked on himself as a person too, leaving the skeptic behind and turning into a believer, he said. He knows the Evys of the world will doubt it, but he sees meaningful connections everywhere now; Even in the filmās release date that he had nothing to do with.
āItās a miracle that I made this thing and then A24 bought it, and then Sundance and then the release on Friday the 13th,ā Tuason said. āMy dad passed on Friday, the 13th. And March was the last month I had with my mom.ā
Whatās next: Paranormal Activity and Kung-Fu
Though moviegoers might just be discovering Tuason, Hollywood has already taken notice. In December, he was tapped to direct a new āParanormal Activityā film. He knows that horror is what people want from him, and as a self-proclaimed people pleaser he wants to do that too. But he does have dreams of delving into other genres as well, like science fiction and, eventually, Kung-Fu.
āItās going to be modern day Kung-Fu,ā he said.
But now, heās focused on getting āUndertoneā out to the world. And heās grateful that heās starting to see it as a film and a character, separate from himself.
āItās starting to feel less and less like me,ā he said. āThere wasnāt any separation for the longest time, but now I watch it in the theater and Iām a little bit more distanced ⦠now I can look at it and kind of just focus on the technique, the art and have it live as a thing separate from me.ā
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā