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Currently,
television in India has very little to offer horror
lovers. Adults shopping for spine chillers on Indian
channels will like as not have to settle for "soft
horror" targeted primarily at kids, that too
if they can make it to their drawing rooms as early
as, say, 8 pm.
Kids
today, who are denied the sweet experience called
grandma's tales, have taken to hugging the next best
thing - television. The tube today provides an avenue
through which kids can quench their thirst for fantasies
involving supernatural, ghosts and ghost-busters,
which is why the soft horror shown on television has
got them "glued in". Naturally this has
encouraged channels to explore this variant of the
genre, eyeing higher TRPs, while making sure that
the content appeals to the whole family.
How
do we view this phenomenon? It could be looked at
either way - children's shows graduating to horror
or horror shows having been hit with a demotion.
Says
Sahara's programming vice president Tripti Sharma,
"We have to address the whole family. While addressing
a television audience, we should keep in mind that
the whole family is watching. So the content should
not be very shocking or violent. To attract kids with
horror, you don't need a lot of blood, violence or
scary scenes. It should have a universal appeal when
it comes on TV."
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Still
from Raat Hone Ko Hai:
softening horror!
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Sahara
TV recently launched Raat Hone Ko Hai (RHKH),
scheduled at 8 pm. The show, which was initially announced
as a daily that was to
air from Monday to Thursday at 11 pm, was moved to
the present time slot when the launch neared. The
whole marketing strategy of the show implies that
it is targeted at the 4 - 18 age group.
Sharma
vindicates Sahara's decision to go for soft horror
and choosing children as its target audience: "Sahara's
Horror Show was very popular among kids. They
really love supernatural stuff because there is a
lot of special effects and graphics shown in them.
This may be the main reason why they like the horror
genre and at the same time, we can't fill the stuff
with violence and bloodshed because our target group
is kids and family audiences."
According
to Sharma, channels have to follow certain guidelines
while packaging the content of horror shows. "The
remote control, nowadays, is mostly in the hands of
kids or women," she points out.
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Raat
Hone Ko Hai;
kids are having fun!
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And
why 8 pm? "Because, that is the time kids are
in front of the TV. We wanted to target the whole
family with something different while other channels
are airing comedy or family soaps. At the same time
we wanted to give something that appeals to the whole
family. The timing also depends on the availability
of the audience," reasons Sharma.
"Ours
is a family entertainment channel. So we can't air
programmes marked by violence and all the evil mayhem.
The majority won't like it," explains Star India
senior vice president, content and communications,
Deepak Segal.
Production
house BAG Films' Mumbai head Rajesh Chaddha however,
has another take on it. Chaddha points to the lack
of talented filmmakers who understand the genre perfectly
as one reason for the "degeneration".
"The
director should be able to convey the exact mood by
handling camera angles and sound effects effectively
to do justice to horror," remarks Chaddha.
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Koie
Jane Na is all about getting logical things
out of supersticial elements, claims maker Rajesh
Chaddha
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But
Chaddha does accept that kids prefer such horror shows
to other programmes these days. Which is of course
great for channels ever in search of wider audiences.
Producer
and actor Jamnadas Majethia of Hats Off Productions
agrees with Chaddha on the quality issue. According
to him, original horror requires technically superior
quality.
"I
can't say we don't have talented people, but I don't
like whatever stuff they are currently coming out
with. I don't like whatever I have been seeing lately.
I find them highly repulsive," says Majethia.
But
he sees a reason for the slackness --- the limited
budgets available in the TV industry. "Because
of the budget pressures, our producers and filmmakers
are unable to come up with something solid,"
opines Majethia.
As
regards why the kids are lapping it up, Majethia explains:
"They like thrill rides in theme parks and they
enjoy it more than we adults do. So, nowadays kids
find these horror shows really entertaining and they
enjoy the thrill."
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A
still from Shhh...
Koi Hai
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Television
scriptwriter Sameer Mody, who has successfully explored
television's thriller genre with shows like X-zone,
Thriller at 10, Saturday Suspense, Captain House and
Shhh... Koi Hai, believes that channels' requirements
to improve TRP ratings are instrumental in the initiation
of soft horror shows. According to Mody, the stiff
competition prevailing to get the maximum eyeballs
sets the stage for such experiments:
"Our
channels are targeting the 4-14 and 14-19 age groups
with these horror shows. When it comes to the conceptualisation
of an original horror show, the writer's and the channel's
points of view clash," says Mody.
Mody
says channels can never ignore women who constitute
80 per cent of their audience and this is one reason
why they keep women in mind every time they conceive
their shows.
Mody
feels that the approach of production houses to serious
horror shows should change.
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Aahat
showed justice to the horror genre, feel Aananth
Mahadevan and Venita Coelho
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"If
you approach production houses with an original horror
subject, they put restrictions. Though in Hollywood
pure horror works, here the common notion is that
it won't work and they try to apply a lot of changes.
In their attempts to come up with something different,
they end up creating an inferior product," says
Mody.
"In
films, writers have some time in hand to work on and
improve the quality of their scripts while in television
it is just the opposite. In TV, quantity matters more
than quality. We come up with mediocre stuff because
everything happens on a short notice," says Mody.
Comedy
channel SAB TV's president sales and marketing Kanta
Advani takes Mody's line when she says she finds special
effects shown in today's horror shows clownish and
of sub-standard quality.
Sahara's
Sharma however, makes a case for the kind of horror
fare that is going out when she states that the "improved
technical quality" of today's horror shows has
been giving the audience more chill and excitement.
And
Star's Segal makes a valid point when he says that
technical perfection may go unnoticed in Indian television,
as the home surroundings can be distracting for the
viewer.
"Your
pressure cooker will be steaming, you will be getting
telephone calls, cries, talks, and all these would
hinder you from experiencing features like sound effects
or graphics to its full extent," points out Segal.
Segal
believes that this is really where films score when
it comes to doing justice to the horror genre: "In
a theatre the atmosphere is perfect as your mind won't
get diverted to anything else.
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| For
laughing out loud, is this what defines horror
on India prime time? |
So
is a new genre that stands between original horror
and kids' horror under evolution? Segal agrees and
prefers to call it 'light-horror' or 'Scooby-Doo horror'.
Sony vice president new product development Venita
Coelho echoes Segal when she christens the shows on
air currently as 'cartoon horror'.
Media
professionals Indiantelevision.com talked to are unanimous
in the view that original adult horror should get
its share of manna on Indian television. Coelho feels
it is time to do intelligent horror outside the prime
time zone. She reveals her personal ambition to do
an original horror show but adds that Sony has no
immediate plans to do such a show.
"Late
night horror shows targeted at the adults have a huge
potential in India. If you can come up with quality
stuff for the late night slot, you will be successful,"
professes actor turned director Ananth Mahadevan.
"I
think the horror genre could do well with lot more
spine chilling stuff. The genre is worth fiddling
with and if handled well, we can come up with quality
programmes," says SAB TV's Advani.
Mody
believes that serious horror shows with a social message
and logical reasoning will surely succeed.
"If
you make Friday the 13th in India, it won't
work because there the violence and bloodshed are
without any logical reason. But in India, the audience
needs a reason for someone going on such a killing
spree. Bhoot worked here because it had something
to do with family backdrop and attracted the family
audience. But the projects that failed in the box
office lacked the same. The theme should have a message
for society as well," says Mody.
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Still
from kya hadsaa kya haqeeqat - overdose
of supernatural and black magic killed the show
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"What
works are themes backed by social elements. We did
a copy of the Hollywood movie The Ring and
it worked," says Balaji Telefilms creative head
(shows) Nivedita Basu (who worked on the supernatural
thriller Kya Hadsa Kya Haqeeqat which recently
went off air from Sony due to declining ratings).
According
to Advani, somebody has to take the bold step and
come up with original horror programmes. "There
is a huge and untapped market," she points out.
So,
again, it is all about taking bold steps. There is
a message here for the channels to seriously consider
a fresh look at the 'untapped market' that original
adult horror could well provide.
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