Don’t even think about calling Ghostbusters.
Consumers have rarely been so eager to hang with supernatural spirits, as well as monsters, psychopaths, zombies and demons. Local experts think people turn to fake fears as an escape from mounting nightmares in real life.
“Horror is super hot right now,” said St. Paul-based writer Tasha Coryell, whose last novel was “Love Letters to a Serial Killer.” “I think it’s going to continue to be super hot.”
Sales of horror fiction jumped more than 24% in 2023, according to Circana BookScan, and have continued to rise ever since, thanks to novels like Grady Hendrix’s “Witchcraft for Wayward Girls” and Stephen Graham Jones’ “The Buffalo Hunter Hunter.”
Seven movies have opened at No. 1 at the box office this year, including “Black Phone 2,” “Final Destination: Bloodlines” and “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” which made $83 million its first weekend, the third biggest ever for a horror film.
In addition to scaring up big business, “Weapons” and “Sinners” have wowed critics, a rarity for a genre that generally gets about as much respect as Tyler Perry comedies. “The Silence of the Lambs” is the only horror flick to ever win the best picture Oscar.
The most watched series of the 2024-25 TV season was Netflix’s “Squid Game,” an all-too literal version of “Survivor,” while CBS’ “Ghosts,” set in a haunted house, remains one of network TV’s most popular sitcoms.
“Alien: Earth” and “It: Welcome to Derry,” two of the most buzzed about shows of the year, soon will be followed by “Crystal Lake,” a prequel to the “Friday the 13th″ films, a “Hostel” series starring Paul Giamatti and the final season of “Stranger Things.”