Daniel Farrands (born September 3, 1969) is an American filmmaker who specializes in the horror film genre. His first major credit was as screenwriter of ' (1995). He has subsequently worked as a producer, writer, and director of both feature and documentary films.
He produced the 2009 horror film The Haunting in Connecticut before directing ' (2010), a documentary on the A Nightmare on Elm Street film series. Farrands subsequently wrote, produced and directed ' (2013), a documentary film on the Friday the 13th film series.
Farrands was born September 3, 1969, in Providence, Rhode Island, but was raised in Santa Rosa, California, in a "strict Catholic household." Farrands developed an interest in horror films as a child, and became enamored with John Carpenter's Halloween (1978) after seeing it air on television as an NBC "Movie of the Week." He graduated from Santa Rosa High School in 1987 before relocating to Los Angeles to pursue a career in film.
In 1990, Farrands approached Halloween producer Moustapha Akkad with a screenplay for a sixth installment in the Halloween film series. A sixth installment was not considered for production until 1995, after Miramax acquired the rights to the Halloween series, and Farrands was appointed as screenwriter. The film, ' (1995), was released in September 1995. Though Farrands wrote the original screenplay, developing subplots that had been obliquely established in ' (1988) and ' (1989), the final version of the film released to theaters was significantly altered by Miramax and much of the final act was ghostwritten without Farrands' involvement.
Farrands later wrote the horror film The Tooth Fairy (2006), before serving as producer of The Haunting in Connecticut (2009).
In 2010, Farrands directed ', a documentary on the A Nightmare on Elm Street film series, and subsequently wrote, produced and directed ', an expansive documentary film on the Friday the 13th film series.
Farrands' other directorial credits include The Amityville Murders (2018), The Haunting of Sharon Tate, The Murder of Nicole Brown Simpson (both 2019), ', and ' (both 2021).