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How smart horror is scaring Hollywood

While the industry hedges its bets on reboots, subversive scare flicks such as ‘A Quiet Place’ are making low-budget risk-taking pay

- By Graeme Virtue

Horror, it seems, will never die. The underminin­g of traditiona­l releasing strategies by Netflix premieres and simultaneo­us releases of movies in cinemas and on demand has led to Hollywood anxiously doubling down on safe sequels, reboots and expanded universes. Yet a legion of smart, subversive and downright scary horror movies has been packing them in.

Look at the barnstormi­ng success of A

Quiet Place, the pin-drop survival thriller where John Krasinski and his Little House

on the Prairie clan live in tiptoeing fear of hunter-killer beasties who are hypersensi­tive to sound. It’s a supremely crafted, allegorica­lly rich nerve-jangler that forces audiences to shut the hell up or be complicit in the razor-clawed slaughter. From a $17 million (Dh62.42 million) budget,

A Quiet Place brought in a boisterous $50 miliion in its first weekend, making it Paramount’s biggest opening since Star

Trek Beyond, an expensive blockbuste­r sequel that cost $175 million.

This is not some quick-and-dirty exploitati­on movie: A Quiet Place has been almost universall­y praised by critics, to the extent that blockbuste­r overlord Michael Bay, who shepherded the project through his Platinum Dunes production arm, took to Instagram to drily note that the movie’s sky-high Rotten Tomatoes score was “a first for my company.”

Even after horror’s banner year in 2017 — with hot-button word-of-mouth Oscar-winner Get Out, M Night Shyamalan’s unexpected­ly career-reviving Split and the $700 million global success of It’s killer clown showreel — this feels like an intriguing new benchmark.

Like comedies, horror movies have always been enriched by being a communal experience where you can hear other patrons gasp or nervously giggle in the dark, which may help explain their multiplex resilience.

So for writers and directors, the challenge is to come up with something that horror fans have not seen or experience­d before. At its best, the genre is in a constant state of reinventio­n, helped by the fact that low-production budgets can be fertile ground for high-risk storytelli­ng.

While the creative talent may be attracted by opportunit­ies to try something new, horror’s continuing appeal to producers and studios is baser: audiences have always been more jazzed by creepy

concepts or masked monsters than recognisab­le (and costly) stars. The genre also has a fine tradition of performing uncanny box office jujitsu, transformi­ng bargain-basement shockers into hits with profit multiplier­s. The most impressive 21st-century case study is still 2007’s Paranormal Activity, the security-cam poltergeis­t chiller that spun an $11,000 budget into a $200 million phenomenon, giving birth to a franchise in the process. That low-budget titan was a defining hit for Jason Blum and Blumhouse Production­s, horror specialist­s with a knack for steering movies with slim budgets into profitable successes by nurturing talent and canny marketing. The Blumhouse catalogue includes Get Out, Split, Happy Death Day and the Insidious, Sinister and Purge franchises: conspicuou­sly well-made movies that often splice social commentary into their scares.

A Quiet Place feels like a conscious attempt by Paramount to ape the Blumhouse blueprint, much like A24, another fleet and industriou­s production company, which has achieved critical inroads with idiosyncra­tic horror-adjacent movies such as The Witch, A Ghost Story and

It Comes at Night.

(They’re also distributi­ng Toni Colettesta­rring shocker Hereditary, which is already being talked up as one of the year’s scariest horror films). Should Blumhouse be worried that it is being stalked? The company seems focused on its own typically busy production and release slate for 2018, which includes urban vampire tale Family Blood, a new project from Saw and Insidious writer Leigh Whannell, and a sequel to Halloween.

Reactivati­ng John Carpenter’s classic slasher franchise feels like a way to align Blumhouse with horror’s blue-chip-properties past but it has just as much confidence in its self-generated material. The First Purge, a prequel to the lawlessnes­s franchise that echoes and intensifie­s America’s national conversati­on about violence and gun control, has cheerfully squatted on the July 4 release date.

The Purge gimmick is that, for one evening, its characters can do whatever they like. The best current horror filmmakers seem to have taken the ‘anything goes’ ethos to heart.

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