Los Angeles Times

CHILLS GALORE

A new age of terror and its King take control of the small screen

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Television has been described in many ways over the past 15 years, ranging from the compliment­ary — golden, peak, prestige, renaissanc­e — to the worrisome — splintered, fragmented, overwhelmi­ng.

A f lorid list to which we must now add “horrified.” Television in 2019 is horrified.

No, not the news cycle. (Well, yes, the news cycle, but that’s another story.) Horrified as in an industry-wide embrace of supernatur­al beings that are not essentiall­y lovable metaphors for high school angst or star-crossed love but actual creepy, scary, don’t-look-now monsters. Demons, witches, zombies and assorted vengeful spirits who live under rocks, in sinkholes, haunted houses and the skins of humans they have ingested one way or the other haunt our TV screens and hand-held devices (which they occasional­ly use to send desperate or super-creepy messages).

Consider this: There are three Stephen King-inspired series on television: “Mr. Mercedes” (Directv’s Audience), “Castle Rock” (Hulu) and “Creepshow” (Shudder). Next year, barring the cancellati­on of any or all of these, there will be six, including “The Stand” (CBS All Access), “Lisey’s Story” (Apple TV+) and “The Outsider” (HBO).

Six! King is the most adapted writer of our time. Seriously, there has been a King adaptation in theaters and/or television every year since 1979. Some years there

have been as many as six films and series. But never six series alone (with at least three films also on the books).

So if you’re wondering what will be holding the teetering tower of everincrea­sing television platforms together, it’s not Dick Wolf or J.J. Abrams or even Sherlock Holmes. It’s Stephen King and the genre he represents.

Horror has ever lurked in the dark corners of television, regularly reminding the world of its power with sudden, ferocious attacks — “Kolchack: The Night Stalker,” “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” “Supernatur­al,” “True Blood,” “American Horror Story” “The Walking Dead.” But it was never taken as seriously as, say, police and medical procedural­s or political satire or historical dramas or hourlong exploratio­ns of how difficult it is to be a white guy in the CIA/mob/Old West/world of advertisin­g, fire-fighting or plastic surgery.

When “American Horror Story” debuted on FX in 2011, creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk literally piled in all their favorite horror stories into the first season — who knew if they would get a second?

Last week “AHS,” now in its ninth season, aired its 100th episode, while Murphy has moved on to more topical horrors, and Netflix, with “The Politician.”

Which is probably smart. Monomaniac­al rich folks and their family empires (see also: “Succession”) are pop culture’s new vampires, while actual monsters have turned television into an at times literal hellscape. Certainly that’s what’s happened at AMC, where prestige — “Mad Men” and “Breaking Bad,” “Better Call Saul,” “Halt and Catch Fire” — has surrendere­d to “The Walking Dead,” “Fear the Walking Dead,” “Preacher,” “The Terror,” “NOS4A2” and “A Discovery of Witches.”

Meanwhile, “more is more” Netflix has piled on not only original homegrown scares — “Stranger Things,” “The Haunting of Hill House,” “The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina” — but also subtitled supernatur­al programs, including “Marianne” (French), “Dark” (German), “Diablero” (Spanish), “Kingdom” (South Korean) and, my favorite, “Black Spot” (French-Belgian). (For the record, Sundance went internatio­nal first with the French-language “Les Revenants,” although the series is now, of course, available on Netflix.)

Hulu’s got “Light as a Feather,” “Into the Dark” and, if we’re going to get political, “Handmaid’s Tale”; Amazon has “Lore” and a host of other non-original content, including “Bates Motel.” “American Horror Story” paved the way for “The Strain” and “What We Do in the Shadows” on FX. Geena Davis starred in the now-canceled Fox series “The Exorcist,” and Showtime recently announced that there will be a fourth season of its gone-but-notforgott­en “Penny Dreadful.” Even the creators of “The Good Wife” recently went evil with “Evil” on CBS.

And that’s only the tip of the werewolf ’s ear. What in Satan’s name is going on?

The easy answer? Digital effects. They are better, and cheaper, than they’ve ever been, which is a boon for all genres, especially fantasy, sci-fi and horror. The transforma­tion that shocked “An American Werewolf in London” audiences all those years ago is now standard fare, as are string-free bats, monsters assorted, people with eyes that go black, bloody or literally blazing, and all manner of spooky houses or fiery hell gates.

With fear of the cheesefact­or lessened, and the R-rated allowances of cable and streaming, writers who in the past wouldn’t have considered dabbling in the occult are free to create the sort of stories and characters once reserved for serious dramas (while also, it must be said, exploring the shock value of butchery). Shorter seasons and the binge model also help. The excruciati­ng tension of the very best horror is created more by what is not seen than what is, a game of hide and seek that has been, historical­ly, much harder to sustain in episodic TV than in a two-hour-or-so film. Not surprising­ly, many broadcast network scare-fests, including “Buffy,” “Supernatur­al” and, more recently, “Hannibal” and “Grimm,” were essentiall­y procedural­s with monsters. With 10 or fewer episodes, television horror can follow the same “What is that?” “It’s just the wind” beats as film — which is also experienci­ng something of a horror renaissanc­e. The success of “Get Out” made room for prestige frights like “Hereditary,” “Midsommar,” “Us” and “Parasite” while the inevitable King adaptation­s, “It” and to a lesser extent “Pet Sematary,” opened the door for “Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark” and “Ready or Not.”

(If I start listing all the scary movies being made or resurrecte­d on streamers, I will be found years hence as a withered skeleton in a locked room somewhere.)

After “Get Out” premiered, Times film critic Justin Chang proclaimed horror as the genre of the Trump administra­tion, and that is certainly proving to be true. Scary stories have always been a way to explain a world in which bad things happen for no easily explained reason, to explore our collective anxieties and fears.

From “I Married a Witch” to “Twilight,” we have often humanized our monsters. Certainly, television during the Obama administra­tion was also full of witches, vampires, werewolves and even zombies who were struggling just like the rest of us. And “Sabrina,” “iZombie” and other series, most aimed at younger audiences, still carry a “Harry Potter” torch for supernatur­al powers that can be used to fight for good. But increasing­ly, our stories describe evil that is real and bent on absolute destructio­n.

The creatures of this new age of horror cannot be psychologi­cally understood, tamed by love, socialized or brought to justice. They can only be seen for what they are and destroyed.

Make of that what you will.

 ?? Photograph­s by, from top, Frank Ockenfels FX; Shudder; and Ed Araquel AMC ?? THE SCARES are nonstop in FX’s “American Horror Story: Roanoke,” from top, Shudder’s “Creepshow” and “The Terror” on AMC.
Photograph­s by, from top, Frank Ockenfels FX; Shudder; and Ed Araquel AMC THE SCARES are nonstop in FX’s “American Horror Story: Roanoke,” from top, Shudder’s “Creepshow” and “The Terror” on AMC.
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 ?? Juhan Noh Netf lix ?? NETFLIX’S South Korean series “Kingdom” takes on medieval politics and a vicious horde of the undead.
Juhan Noh Netf lix NETFLIX’S South Korean series “Kingdom” takes on medieval politics and a vicious horde of the undead.

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