Tag: Fear Files

  • The resurgence of horror shows on GECs

    The resurgence of horror shows on GECs

    MUMBAI: The horror genre has formed an important part of TV entertainment since the 1990s when Zee Horror Show, Aahat and Ssshhh…Koi Hai were anticipated shows. A resurgence of horror shows on TV has been noticed in the past one month. Ekta Kapoor’s Qayamat Ki Raat, which airs on Star Plus, and Colors TV’s Kaun Hai, both opened to incredible ratings in their first week. Vivek Dahiya and Karishma Tanna starrer Qayamat Ki Raat bagged the seventh spot with 5.6 million impressions while Kaun Hai received 3.89 million impressions and was at the 11th spot.

    Bodhi Tree Multimedia has produced quite a few horror shows like Rooh and Fear Files for Zee TV. “Horror has always been a genre that has worked in the Indian market. It is also been an underserved genre with only our show Fear Files running for the past one year. So more horror shows coming was always anticipated,” says Bodhi Tree Multimedia founder Mautik Tolia. 

    Endemol Shine CEO Abhishek Rege holds a different opinion. He feels that the Indian audiences are dedicated to all sorts of genres and horror was possibly an underserved one. “Although many shows are launching, how many does the market need will only be known after the ratings or the consumption pattern comes out.”

    If horror shows want to create a mark today, they have to come up with good content. Earlier horror shows used to have just one story in an episode. Now horror shows have long term stories with a supernatural background. 

    Earlier, late prime time was the slot given to the horror shows assuming that the kids are asleep by then. But now things are changing. The horror shows have got promoted to earlier time slots (7-9 pm). According to Rege, any time after 8-8.30 pm is a good time slot for a horror show. Shows like Aahat, Fear Files or X-Zone were hard core horror shows. Nowadays there are many shows which have different approaches and if they are not hardcore horror they can be broadcasted at early prime time slot.

    Tolia thinks that the increase in the number of horror shows in India could be due to exposure to international content releasing in India. “A lot of good international horror has been produced over the past few years. Films from the Conjuring universe, Quiet Place, Lights Out, It, Mama and now Hereditary have breathed new life into the genre. So the rub off effect is surely being seen.”

    Advertisers tend to stay away from horror shows due to their low viewership. The earlier shows couldn’t get advertisers due to the late time band. The sudden surge in horror seems to be the channels’ attempts at expanding its offering before festive season kicks in. They could then be replaced with reality format shows.

    Madison Media Sigma CEO Vanita Keshwani feels differently. She says, “According to me, the crime/thriller genre works most for the Indian audience than the horror genre. Shows like Savdhaan India  and Crime Patrol garner more viewership than Aahat and Fear Files. Since shows like Qayamat Ki Raat, Laal Ishq and Kaun Hai have just launched it’s too early to give a judgment on those shows. According to me the horror as a genre is not doing well. But I think they are betting on it.”

    Indian makers have even been plagued by budget issues and a very narrow approach towards the depiction of horror inspired by Indian imagery. However Indian horror is also seeing a paradigm shift in terms of quality of content over past few years. A new breed of filmmakers is churning out a spate of horror films and shows that are able to blend Indian imagery with great storytelling.

    Even though the shows in this genre may or may not gain good TRP, the experimentation continues for adding variety to a channel’s offering.

  • Sony to mesmerise audiences with spine-chilling nights of ‘Aahat’

    Sony to mesmerise audiences with spine-chilling nights of ‘Aahat’

    MUMBAI: Horror and supernatural shows aren’t a novelty for Indian television viewers. The history of horror genre can be traced way back to 1993, when Zee TV launched Ramsay Brothers’ Zee Horror Show and then Sony brought to its audiences Aahat for the very first time in 1996, which thus far is considered as the longest-running horror show on Indian television today. Those were the days of gory scenes and typically white saree-clad women as ghosts.

    Later, came X-Zone (Zee TV – 1998) and Ssshhhh..koi hai (Star One – 2001) which were thriller horror series. Each one of these shows captivated their audiences and ran longer than three successful years.

    The next success in the genre was in 2009, (prior to Fear Files) when Colors launched Balaji Telefilms’ Koi Ane Ko Hai. The show based on paranormal activities got above-average numbers but sadly wound up within six months flat.

    Two years after Sony’s Aahat got a bitter taste of failure in its last season (in 2010), Zee dared to launch Fear Files and not only attracted its viewers with magnetic force, but also prompted the other GECs to follow suit. After a monotonous series of show launches in this genre in the 1990s and early 2000s, the genre was in limbo and the ghosts ceased to frighten people, till Zee TV opened its real files in 2012.

    Zee launched a show based on real-life incidents around paranormal and supernatural activities christened – Fear Files: Darr Ki Sacchi Tasviren and it was heartening that it did so well.

    A year later (2013), SET too thought of jumping on the bandwagon with Bhoot Aya, but failed to grab eyeballs like Aahat did. Again, in the same year, Star Plus’s flanking channel, Life OK too experimented with a series titled Ringa Ringa Roses, but failed to attract the audiences.

    SET is once again ready to keep its audiences spell-bound, with nerve-racking, sleepless nights with the sixth season of Aahat. After a gap of four long years, it is set to make a comeback this January. According to a source from the channel, the move is to rake in some healthy numbers on the ratings chart and is a question of the survival of the fittest in this space.

    It has formerly run five successful seasons from October 1995 right up to November 2010. The series is produced by B.P. Singh and Pradeep Upoor’s Fireworks Productions. Notably, the acclaimed writer Sridhar Raghavan, who penned the spine-chilling, horror stories for the initial 300 episodes of Aahat will again be back on the show as writer. Raghavan has also written for Fireworks Productions’ long-running Sony TV show, CID.

    Media experts believe that to recapture its viewership, it has to further re-invent itself: “Four years ago, the show was definitely successful for its time, but today, a lot of enhancements have taken place in the space, where it has to be much more appealing for audiences to start lapping it up once again,” says Lodestar UM Vice-President Deepak Netram.

    Channels today are investing huge sums of money in the pre-production (research and casting) and production process to crack the code of a successful show. And yet, things go for a toss for Sony. Why is that so?

    A media analyst states two key reasons for the channel struggling at the bottom of the chart. One, the channel relies too much on the single-point tent pole and big properties like KBC and Indian Idol for them to be able to garner the numbers. “They are finite. They don’t last forever. So the minute they go off-air there is a significant drop.”

    Second, not having the foresight to look towards the future.  “Channels like Star Plus and Colors are doing it from time to time. That kind of movement is very important. You can’t be stuck and do only crime, thrillers or horror,” adds the media analyst.

    He further gives the example of Bade Ache Lagte Hai, which did pretty well in the initial stages,   but later on lost a chunk of its viewers. “Doing too much of the same monotonous thing is not always the answer. Therefore, one needs to keep re-inventing in this space. If you are only going to tune into the metros and cater more to the males, the viewership pie will shrink.”

    According to Madison COO, Karthik Lakshminarayan, Sony is going back to its tried and tested formula. “It is a very good strategy in itself by doing something which has worked wonders for the channel in the past. I don’t know whether viewers will accept the Aahat of old again. It depends on what time slot it is put on and other factors. Potentially, it can do well and it might also help the channel to regain its lost numbers.”

    Shifting its agenda from a male-dominated channel to cater to family audiences was the biggest blunder that the channel committed, believe media experts. “Sony is considered to have male- focused content with a slight edge. From there it tried to change and be like any other GEC with their usual soap operas and that is something a Sony viewer will not accept. Going back to where they were is possibly the best thing for them at this point.”

    On similar lines, Netram believes that it has to be a relevant mix of programmes and just can’t be singular or limited genre within the GEC space. He feels that if a channel has too much of a dose of crime and horror, it has its own set of disadvantages. It may get additional male audiences on-board, but might lose out on the female viewership.

    Will Aahat make a successful comeback and be a resounding success? That is a million dollar question comparable to every Friday’s opening weekend’s successful release. “I don’t think so; if it repeats the same level and quality of programming that it was earlier doing. It would be unacceptable to see a similar quality of production that viewers saw four years ago. A sea of change would have to emerge and a channel cannot survive by the lineage of the earlier show. Now everybody is doing horror; why should one be stuck to one channel and not look at the others is a big question,” signs off an anonymous media planner.

     

  • Zee TV strengthens weekends, Fear Files clocks 4 TVR

    MUMBAI: Zee TV has held on to the second position in the Hindi general entertainment channel (GEC) hierarchy, adding 15 GRPs after strengthening its weekend programming.

    As per TAM data (C&S, 4+, HSM) provided by the Hindi GECs, Zee TV recorded 253 GRPs. The new paranormal show of the channel, Fear Files, has garnered 4 TVR while DID lil Masters has improved in ratings. The Saturday (14 July) episode of DID registered 5.2 TVR while the Sunday (8 July) episode got 4 TVR. Interestingly, Zee TV is at No.1 in the weekend primetime programming and is at par with Star Plus in weekday primetime programming.

    Star Plus, even after a loss of 22 GRPs, continued to lead the genre with 276 GRPs. In the previous week, Star Plus had aired IIFA Awards that had helped the channel add 33 GRPs. However, leading fiction properties of the channel have seen a rise in viewership.

    Colors, meanwhile, maintained its status quo on the GEC ladder. The Viacom18 channel added five GRPs to its last week’s tally to register 235 GRPs. The channel’s three fiction properties – Uttaran (3.2 TVR), Balika Vadhu (4.3 TVR) and Sasural Simar Ka (2.9 TVR) – continue to rule their respective slots.

    Sony Entertainment Television (Set) also added 15 GRPs to end the week with 222 GRPs. Its fiction show Bade Achhe Lagte Hain has become the slot leader with 3.7 TVR (last week 2.6). The addition of eyeballs can be attributed to the five-year leap the show has undergone.

    Sab with 123 GRPs (last week 125) is at No. 5 while Life OK continues to occupy the sixth position with 114 GRPs (last week 103).

    Sahara One with 39 GRPs (last week 31) remains at the bottom of the ladder.