Antonio Campos Finds the “Beast” Next Door

Season one currently airing on Netflix

By Judi Jordan for Latin Heat

For a low-key guy, Brazilian-American director-producer Antonio Campos sure knows how to find the beast in his stars. In Netflix’s riveting eight-part limited series c, Campos guides Claire Danes and Matthew Rhys into a psycho duel that explores one of life’s most universal terrors: the bad neighbor. Not just the leaf-blower-at-7-a.m. kind. The “powerful billionaire suspected of murdering his wife moves in next door and takes an alarming interest in you” kind.

Danes plays Aggie Wiggs, a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer shattered by the death of her young son, divorced from her wife Shelley. Rhys plays Nile Jarvis, an almost-charming, lethal real estate billionaire who gate-crashes the community with wealth, menace, and the steely certainty of a man born without a conscience.

Campos understands that dread does not always need a knife, a shadow, or a jump scare. Sometimes it is a property line. A lunch invite. A casual chat where dialog lands like a hammer.

“I do really enjoy, as an audience member, being on the edge of my seat or squirming a little bit,” Campos told Latin Heat. “And so when I can create that feeling, I’m really excited to figure out new ways to do it.”

From the opening episode, which Campos directs with remarkable control, The Beast in Me makes the audience lean in and pull back at the same time. Aggie’s house becomes less a refuge than a pressure chamber. Nile’s proximity is the show’s first act of violence.

Campos directed the first two episodes, then returned for the final two, giving the series its visual spine: the unsettling beginning, the tightening noose, and the moral reckoning.

THE BEAST IN ME. (L to R) Claire Danes as Aggie Wiggs, Natalie Morales as Shelley, and Director/Executive Producer Antonio Campos behind the scenes of Episode 101 of The Beast in Me. Cr. Chris Saunders/Netflix © 2024

“In TV, you take that two and a half hours and you’re stretching it out over eight episodes… I really enjoyed the first two because it’s all about questions… and I really enjoyed the last two because it’s kind of tying it all up.”

The Beast in Me arrives with a serious creative pedigree. Created by Gabe Rotter, with Howard Gordon as showrunner, writer and executive producer, the series has the kind of writers’ room and producing bench that sounds like a prestige television dinner party: Gordon’s credits include Homeland, 24 and The X-Files; Rotter also comes from The X-Files world; Daniel Pearle brings American Crime Story credentials; and the executive producers include Claire Danes, Jodie Foster and Caroline Baron.

For Latino film buffs, Campos’ directing has a distinct thruline: his indie film creds and prestige TV work affirm his gift for varied shades of darkness. His debut feature, Afterschool, premiered at Cannes, establishing Campos’ eye for alienation, surveillance, and the psychic violence of modern life. Simon Killer pushed deeper into the mind of a charming young sociopath, while Christine, starring Rebecca Hall, flipped real-life tragedy into a crushing portrait of ambition, isolation, and implosion. Campos’ work in Netflix’s star-packed Southern Gothic The Devil All the Time is worth a revisit: damaged people, moral rot, violence waiting politely in the next room. He also directed the pilot of The Sinner and created, wrote, directed and executive produced HBO Max’s The Staircase.

A common thread runs through his work: Campos is drawn to people trapped inside their own stories — by grief, obsession, guilt, ambition, or the terrible private logic that allows them to justify the unjustifiable. He is interested in people who believe they have reasons.

Campos does not call himself a horror director, exactly. But when asked whether he would ever consider directing horror, his answer was immediate.

“Oh yeah,” he said. “I think about it a lot. I love horror.”

After The Beast in Me, that sounds less like a confession than a promise.

The Beast in Me the eight-episode dramatic thriller premiered in late 2025 and is available to stream globally on Netflix.

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