Latest Horror Movies In Telugu ❲CERTIFIED - PACK❳

No jump scares for the first 40 minutes. Instead, the film uses silence, long takes, and the oppressive heat of the Indian summer. Critics called it “ The Wailing meets Telangana folklore.” 2. 36 Vayadhu… Chivaraku (December 2025) – Psychological Terror Genre: Home invasion / Memory loss Where to watch: Netflix (Telugu original)

Set in the Agency area of Andhra, Kampanalu (translates to The Tremors ) introduces Rathapisaachi —a demon that latches onto villages during land disputes. The horror is visceral: victims hear bells under their skin, then begin to walk backward, then… melt. The film’s low budget works in its favor, using practical effects and real tribal performance art. latest horror movies in telugu

A team of three YouTubers investigates a haunted zamindar mansion in Kurnool. The first hour is pure mimicry of Gonjiam and Grave Encounters —but the last 30 minutes go completely off the rails. The entity doesn’t just kill; it mimics the team’s voices to call their real family members, and the final shot suggests the footage we watched has been altered by the ghost itself. No jump scares for the first 40 minutes

A 5-minute single-take where the protagonist washes her face, and the mirror reflection slowly smiles differently. 3. Kampanalu (October 2025) – Folk Horror on a Budget Genre: Rural legend / Body horror Where to watch: Prime Video (Telugu with subs) A team of three YouTubers investigates a haunted

It avoids the “urban skeptic vs. rural belief” cliché. Instead, the heroine is a local forest officer who half-believes the myth, making the dread feel earned. 4. Mukha Mukhamuga (August 2025) – AI Horror Genre: Tech-horror / Doppelgänger Where to watch: Disney+ Hotstar

The most modern of the lot. A video editor (Sundeep Kishan) gets hired to restore old footage of a dead actress. But the AI enhancement tool starts generating new frames—showing murders that haven’t happened, in the editor’s own house. Soon, his streaming devices play recordings of him sleeping, his phone autocorrects to threats, and his own face on screen mouths words he never said.

Starring a career-best performance by Nithya Menen, this film flips the haunted-house trope. A middle-aged archivist begins seeing a child’s shadow in her new flat. But the twist: the shadow is her childhood trauma manifesting. The horror is intensely psychological—doors open to wrong rooms, phone calls play her own forgotten screams, and the final act reveals a cycle of family violence that blurs reality.