Horror and music collide in Chatter’s “Panic”, a blood-soaked fever dream directed by Samuel Gonzalez Jr. and starring a lineup of icons.
Horror and music have always made a wickedly good pair — from Rob Zombie’s blood-splattered riffs to cinematic fever dreams like Queen of the Damned and Mandy. Now, a new artist named Chatter is fusing those worlds into something thrillingly original with the debut of their new single and music video, “Panic,” which premiered on September 26, 2025.
Directed by filmmaker Samuel Gonzalez Jr. (The Retaliators, The Plastic Men, Stiletto), Panic is far more than a traditional music video. It’s a bold visual manifesto.
Part revenge fantasy, part performance art, it drips with style, rage, and catharsis. The filmic short bursts from the screen like a scream through a megaphone, fueled by theatrical energy and anchored in the same blood-red heart that beats through horror itself.
The video boasts a dream lineup of cult icons and rock world heavyweights, including:
- John Kassir, the unforgettable voice of the Crypt Keeper (Tales from the Crypt)
- Russell Todd (Friday the 13th Part 2)
- Jose Mangin, Metal Ambassador at SiriusXM Octane
- Royal & The Serpent, the alt-pop trailblazer
- Brent Burdett, of the rising rock band Beauty School Dropout
This mix of horror royalty and music-scene misfits gives Panic a chaotic, cross-genre charge that feels like a midnight movie and a live show fused into one.
For Chatter, Panic isn’t just a song; it’s an exorcism.
“I am beyond thrilled to finally unveil my story — a tale drenched in raw emotion and burning with theatrical fire,” says Chatter. “This is more than art; it’s a transformation. Because when someone is pushed too far… they don’t just break. They become something else entirely.”
That “something else” feels like a new kind of monster… one that smiles through bloodied teeth, wearing pain like armor. Chatter’s persona is less performer and more manifestation: a vessel for rage, empowerment, and defiance.
Director Samuel Gonzalez Jr. saw the potential to turn Chatter’s vision into something cinematic and hauntingly personal.
“When CHATTER first approached me with this concept, I saw more than just a music video — I saw the birth of a horror icon,” Gonzalez explains. “This project became a cinematic monster of its own, a bloody love letter to those who’ve been silenced by trauma and bullied into the shadows. We wanted to craft a world where vengeance wears a smile, where every tooth tells a story, and where horror meets heart in a brutal, beautiful way.”
That ethos of horror as a voice for the voiceless is deeply in tune with the spirit of Morbidly Beautiful’s audience: fans who see horror not just as escapism, but as empowerment. Panic isn’t just horror for the sake of shock; it’s horror with purpose.
With Gonzalez’s moody, kinetic direction and Chatter’s commanding screen presence, Panic is destined to become a cult favorite among horror-music hybrids. It channels the same rebellious energy that made icons like Alice Cooper, Marilyn Manson, and Ghost household names for those who prefer their art a little darker and a lot more dangerous.
Panic is now available across all major streaming platforms.

















Follow Us!