Andrew Kasch

Andrew Kasch
Born Tallahassee, FL

Andrew Kasch is an American film director and editor.

Life and career

Born and raised in the South, Kasch had a lifelong obsession with sci-fi, horror and fantasy and went on to study film at the Savannah College of Art & Design where he graduated in 2013.

After moving to Los Angeles to pursue a career, he started working in film journalism and became one of the founding members of Dread Central. His work has been published in Fangoria, Asian Cult Cinema and Girls and Corpses.

Shortly after his arrival in Los Angeles, he directed and edited the short horror-comedy Thirsty, starring Joe Lynch and Tiffany Shepis. The film became a cult hit on the festival circuit for several years before it was acquired by Fearnet.[1]

In 2009, Kasch was hired to edit bonus content for the horror franchise documentary His Name Was Jason: 30 Years of Friday the 13th. After a turbulent production, Kasch and director Daniel Farrands broke off and worked for several years making documentaries for DVD/Blu-ray releases of several horror films, including the Friday the 13th series for Paramount and The Haunting in Connecticut for Lionsgate.[2] In 2010, the duo independently directed the 4-hour Freddy Krueger/New Line Cinema documentary Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy which won several awards and is widely regarded as one of the best film documentaries ever made.[3][4]

Following the release of Never Sleep Again, Kasch formed a directing team with horror writer and filmmaker John Skipp. Their first project was the award-winning festival short Stay At Home Dad.[5]

Kasch also worked as an editor for Mike Judge's 2012 revival of Beavis & Butthead as well as several other television shows. He has also continued to work on bonus material for home video releases, including catalog titles from Scream Factory. He has edited and/or produced documentaries for over 30 genre films, including the Halloween and Star Trek franchises, Scream, Evil Dead 2, Day of the Dead, and Phantasm II.[6] He directed 2014 along with John Skipp the segment "This Means War", of the horror anthology film Tales of Halloween,[7] which stars Dana Gould and James Duval in the leading roles.[8]

Selected Filmography

Director

Editor

References