For the first time, a Telugu horror film didn't rely on loud background scores. It relied on silence. And the audience was terrified. Just as Malayalam cinema gave us Rorshach and Tamil gave us Demonte Colony , Telugu found its gritty voice in the found-footage format.
But something shifted in the last decade. The ghost has stopped dancing to item songs. The shadows have grown quieter, and the screams… the screams sound like us. telugu horror
Welcome to the new wave of Telugu horror. To understand where Telugu horror is going, we must acknowledge where it has been. The 1980s and 90s were dominated by the "Devi" tropes. Films like Ammoru (1995) set the gold standard—not of horror, but of devotional fervor. The horror wasn't psychological; it was a moral failing. The ghost was a wronged woman seeking revenge, and the solution was always a benevolent goddess. The scares were secondary to the spectacle. For the first time, a Telugu horror film
For the longest time, if you mentioned “horror” in the context of Telugu cinema, audiences didn’t picture a haunted house. They pictured a devudi patam (photo of a god) flickering, a thota kodi (rooster) being sacrificed, and a scantily clad villainess laughing maniacally before being exorcised by a hero who could also fight ten goons with one hand tied behind his back. Just as Malayalam cinema gave us Rorshach and
But the real sleeper hit was . Shot on a shoestring budget, Deyyam used the "smartphone horror" aesthetic. The protagonist records everything, and the horror comes from watching the playback—noticing the figure standing behind you three nights ago. It tapped into the modern fear: What if the demon is already in the room, and I just haven't scrolled to that part of the video yet? Why the Shift? The Andhra Gothic So, why is Telugu horror suddenly working? Because it stopped trying to be The Conjuring and started looking inward.
We are seeing a golden age of low-budget, high-return horror films that prioritize atmosphere over absurdity. Directors like Karthik Varma Dandu and Sai Kiran are building a new lexicon—one where the Karthika deepam (lamplight) isn't a symbol of hope, but the only thing keeping the darkness at bay.