It goes up from horizon, not down, from ground to sky, just a result of quick serach. If you could see it going up in the sky, it obviously could go from below horizon. Search for amateur astronomers overnight meteor shower videos, then spend few days watching them out, with high probability you will find what you need. Or wait for next meteor shower and be ready with telescope and watch them by your own eyes.
You mean something like that: https://youtu.be/xy7OHmICi_o?t=32 ?
Unfortunately, there was no any really intense meteor showers in the era of affordable good cameras.
they didn't show anything coming from below horizon in this video
It goes up from horizon, not down, from ground to sky, just a result of quick serach. If you could see it going up in the sky, it obviously could go from below horizon. Search for amateur astronomers overnight meteor shower videos, then spend few days watching them out, with high probability you will find what you need. Or wait for next meteor shower and be ready with telescope and watch them by your own eyes.