Abstract Telugu cinema, popularly known as Tollywood, is globally renowned for its grandiose spectacles, elaborate song-and-dance routines, and larger-than-life heroes. While genres like action, romance, and family drama have flourished, horror has historically occupied a niche, often hybridized space. This paper provides an informative overview of Telugu horror cinema, tracing its early mythological roots, its evolution through socio-political allegories and comedy hybrids, its directorial experimentation, and its current resurgence with a new wave of technically proficient, psychologically driven films. It argues that while pure horror has been rare, the genre’s unique ability to blend fear with folklore, social commentary, and broad comedy has created a distinctive, if often overlooked, cinematic subculture. Introduction For decades, the archetypal Telugu film hero has been invincible, capable of defying physics and villainy with a single punch. This narrative framework presents an inherent challenge for horror, a genre predicated on vulnerability, suspense, and the fear of the unknown. Consequently, Telugu horror rarely manifests in the Western tradition of slashers or supernatural dread. Instead, it adapts, creating sub-genres where ghosts serve as tools for justice, comedy, or metaphor. This paper examines three distinct phases of Telugu horror: the mythological-vengeful spirit, the horror-comedy blockbuster, and the emerging psychological-auteur cinema. Phase 1: Mythological Roots and the Vengeful Spirit (1950s–1980s) The earliest Telugu horror films drew directly from Hindu mythology and folklore. Films like Maya Bazaar (1957), while a fantasy epic, featured demonic transformations and supernatural elements that sowed seeds for the genre. However, the foundational archetype emerged with Aatma Balam (1964) and later Devata (1982). These films established the "vengeful spirit" trope: a wronged woman (often a wife or lover) who dies tragically and returns as a Yakshi or Bhootam to punish the guilty.