<em><span>B</span></em><span><em><em>etter Watch Ou</em>t </em></span><span>is currently in UAE cinemas, doing the rounds of festive frights. It's bombed at the box office back in the United States, taking only US$12,000 (Dh44,077) on its opening weekend, but here's the strange thing: critics loved it. Critical appraisal, admittedly, does not a successful film make – just ask Denis Villeneuve and Ridley Scott (</span><span><em>Blade Runner</em></span><span>) about that one – but a 90 per cent approval on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes suggests something is right about the film.</span> <span>Tie that in with the box office and critical success of Andy Muschietti's </span><span><em>It</em></span><span>, Jordan Peele's </span><span><em>Get Out</em></span><span> and David F Sandberg's </span><span><em>Annabelle: Creation</em></span><span>, all over one summer, and you can't help asking "when did horror get cool again?" </span> <span>For years, the horror genre was a thing of ridicule. Critically derided, and viewed mostly by teenage boys with a loyalty card for their local video store (remember them?), it existed outside of mainstream cinema. A thing to be mocked, hated or ignored.</span> <span>It wasn't always that way. Look at the '70s and early '80s when the genre came into its own. </span><span>William Friedkin's </span><span><em>The Exorcist </em></span><span>(1973), Richard Donner's </span><span><em>The Omen</em></span><span> (1976), John Carpenter's </span><span><em>Halloween</em></span><span> (1978), or Stanley Kubrick's </span><span><em>The Shining</em></span><span> (1980) were all critically acclaimed, and commercially successful, yet simultaneously terrifying. Look back even further. Ask yourself what is the most striking image of the silent movie era? </span><span>Max Schreck's </span><span>Count Orlock and his </span><span>shadow in FW Murnau's </span><span><em>Nosferatu</em></span><span> (1922) is probably on your</span><span> shortlist.</span> <span>But something seemed to happen in the '80s, when horror was incredibly popular but produced </span><span>diminishing returns. </span><span><em>A Nightmare on Elm Street </em></span><span>(1984) was a great film, but its interminable sequels are perhaps the most striking example of an entire genre becoming a parody of itself. Throw in </span><span><em>Friday the 13th </em></span><span>(1980) </span><span>and we have a prime example of a genre that became creatively bankrupt.</span> <span>Some cite the '80s as a high point for horror. I disagree. It was high on quantity, but low on quality. Even outstanding films like </span><span><em>The Lost Boys</em></span><span> (1987) relied heavily on the fact that, with The Sisters of Mercy's </span><span><em>Floodland</em></span><span> slaying dance floors that year, there would be a marketplace of vampire-loving goths to buy into the mythology of a film marketed at them.</span> <span>Fast forward to the '90s, and horror was nowhere. We'll give</span><span><em> The Blair Witch Project</em></span><span> (1999) a pass here as it really was an entirely new genre of low-budget, found-footage genius, but who seriously has </span><span><em>Candyman</em></span><span> (1992) in their top 10 film list? The downward trend continued into the 2000s</span><span>,</span><span> with poor </span><span>efforts, such as Neil LaBute's 2006 remake of 1973 cult horror </span><span><em>The Wicker Man</em></span><span>. </span> <span>Horror-loving directors with any sense set off on paths away from the mainstream, with films such as Eli Roth's </span><span><em>Hostel</em></span><span> (2005), Tom Six's </span><span><em>The Human Centipede</em></span><span> (2009) and Srdjan Spasojevic's </span><span><em>Srpski Film</em></span><span> (2010). Gruesome films </span><span>but each in their own way a reaction to just how bad the horror genre had become, and an experiment in how horrific a niche director could make "horror" in the absence of decent horror.</span> <span>Now here we are in 2017, and horror is once more in vogue. Muschietti's</span><span><em> It </em></span><span>has taken a staggering $700bn at the box office. Peele's </span><span><em>Get Out</em></span><span> is being spoken about in </span><span>Oscar conversations. Closer to home, Babak Anvari's Tehran-set </span><span><em>Under the Shadow</em></span><span> retains a staggering 99 per cent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, while Majid Al Ansari's</span><span><em> Zinzana </em></span><span>(2015) is one </span><span>of the best films to have come out of the UAE to date, as well as the only one to have gained </span><span>international traction, thanks to Netflix</span><span> streaming. You could argue that there's a cultural cause for this. In a world of </span><span>cult-of-personality leaders, ongoing war and economic meltdown, we have plenty to be scared of. </span> <span>Ultimately, though, I'd argue that there are two sorts of films that will always have a place in the </span><span>heart and mind. Those that make you love, and those that make you</span><span> frightened. We love to be scared, but what seems to have happened recently</span><span> </span><span>is that directors </span><span>have started making scary films that are actually good again. And it's about time too. </span> _____________________ Read more: _____________________