Try GOLD - Free
Bloody brilliant
Hindustan Times Jammu
|October 25, 2025
Horror movies are picking fights with the patriarchy. Spooky shows are leaving tired tropes back in the haveli. Dim the lights, we've got new scare tactics
Try not to scream. Horror is going through its own full-moon transformation.
The shocks go beyond jump scares, the jokes are meta, there are very real concerns woven into the gory mix. Big studios are backing horror content, A-listers are signing up to slash or be slashed, the Oscars are paying attention. In Bollywood, horror-comedies are out-grossing boilerplate blockbusters and streaming shows are giving the genre room to slow down and get under your skin.
Even as it howls its way into the mainstream, horror is turning out to have a code of its own. Dim the lights. We're shining the torch on the new rules of scare fare.
The first casualties
The old rule: Black characters, promiscuous women, that one guy cracking bad jokes - they'd all be the first to die. In Bollywood, it was usually a side character: A corrupt priest, an adulterous man, a nosy cop.
The new rule: All kills have purpose. In Sinners (2025), a white KKK couple is the first victim. In Jordan Peele's Get Out (2017) and Nope (2022), Black characters make it to the end. But films now rip your heart out early. A Quiet Place (2018) kills the Abbott family's youngest child in the first scene; Midsommar (2019) begins with a murder-suicide. In Weapons (2025), a loving gay couple is Aunt Gladys's first casualty. Meanwhile, in Stree (2018) turns the monster into the main character. All this time, women couldn't step out after dark. Now, men quake because of a feminine force
Bollywood's female-led ghost scene, no man is safe (unless it's a family-friendly horror-comedy like Stree).
The calling card
The old rule: Horror used to be cinema's neglected stepchild. Creature features would be made on the cheap, with the same haunted havelis, creaky mansions, tacky effects, and implausible plots. The blood, torture, and semi-porn didn't help its cred. After all, how many Raaz movies are too many Raaz movies?
This story is from the October 25, 2025 edition of Hindustan Times Jammu.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Hindustan Times Jammu
Hindustan Times Jammu
Oct GST rake-in up 4.6% to ₹1.96L-cr
Gross GST revenue in October neared ₹1.96 lakh crore — the fifth highest monthly collection since the tax regime's 2017 launch — despite capturing a September when
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Jammu
‘After 2005, Bihar grew under my govt’
Asserting that “being a Bihari is now a matter of pride”, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar on Saturday urged people to once again vote for the NDA in the upcoming assembly polls for faster development of the state.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Jammu
Leisure as time for intellectual renewal
My advice to newly recruited civil service officers has always been that, in addition to their profession, they must cultivate a hobby or sport.
3 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Jammu
NAXALISM ENDING IN CHHATTISGARH: PM INAUGURATES ₹14K-CR PROJECTS
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday said the number of Maoist-affected districts has fallen to three from 125 in the last Il years, and the “day is not far” when the whole of Chhattisgarh and the country will be freed from the Naxal menace.
1 min
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Jammu
Cloud-capped star, auteur of Partition
Ritwik Ghatak’s films and writings humanised the art of cinema on an epic scale. The pioneering filmmaker, whose 100th birthday falls on Tuesday, was an original voice who captured the tragedy and trauma of exile
5 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Jammu
Ode to November and memories of autumn
We don't really have an autumn in Delhi. Our summer merges into winter with only a brief transition heralded by the passage of Diwali. This means Keats's Ode to Autumn is just a poem for us. His “season of mists and mellow fruitfulness” is a haunting description, nota lived reality.
2 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Jammu
On the sunny side of the street
We've only had mass-produced sunscreen for about a century. How come? Check out the roles played by class, race, Coco Chanel
2 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Jammu
Accepting women’s equal right to space
When two Australian cricket players stepped out of their hotel in Indore to stroll down to a nearby café, they ended up inadvertently experiencing what Indian women do every day: Street sexual assault.
2 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Jammu
At ASEAN, Rajnath backs inclusive, free Indo-Pacific
Defence minister Rajnath Singh on Saturday put the spotlight on the Indo-Pacific region and said it must remain free from coercion, reiterating India’s position that a rules-based international order is a must for peace, prosperity and stability in the vast maritime expanse.
1 mins
November 02, 2025
Hindustan Times Jammu
Where is all your money going?
The official inflation numbers don't currently match the rate you experience - at the grocery store, the hospital, the child's school. Why does this happen, and how bad is it? What can you do to safeguard against the erosion of earnings, savings and household budgets? Kashyap Kompella explores personal inflation
5 mins
November 02, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
