Gulf News

‘Candyman’ for a new generation

Film reclaims and recenters the narrative around the Black experience

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Candyman was always more than a surface level horror film. The 1992 film dealt with class, race and trauma. But almost 30 years later, a new version in UAE theatres Anow reclaims and recenters the narrative around the Black experience.

The original film took the seeds of a Clive Barker short story set in a Liverpool slum and transporte­d it to Chicago’s Cabrini-Green housing projects, where the Boogeyman was Black and the lens to the world was a white female doctoral student studying urban myths. The film was both praised and the subject of pointed critiques from Black filmmakers who noted the regressive racial stereotype­s.

“There’s no question that this film plays on white middle-class fears of black people,” actor-director Carl Franklin told the Chicago Tribune at the time. “It unabashedl­y uses racial stereotype­s and destructiv­e myths to create shock.”

Franklin said it was, “irresponsi­ble and racist.”

But it was also successful enough to spawn two sequels and proved to be a formative film for a young Jordan Peele, who saw it as a landmark for representa­tion. Following the success of Get Out, Peele and his Monkeypaw Production­s set their sights on a Candyman film and signed up-and-coming filmmaker Nia DaCosta to direct.

DaCosta had just one indie under her belt, the well-received crime drama Little Woods, when her agent got wind of a Jordan Peele Candyman project.

“I always told [my agent] what I wanted to do and I made Little Woods, which was a really great experience, but I also really wanted to do bigger films, genre films and horror and Marvel movies,” DaCosta, 31, said. “He introduced them to my work and it just ended up working out...I don’t want to pitch for something if I don’t really have a clear idea and a passion for what it will be. I think they responded to that level of detail and the passion that I had.”

Described as a “spiritual sequel” to the first film, Peele, who co-wrote the script, and DaCosta’s Candyman put their subjects, a successful gallery director, Brianna (Teyonah Parris), and her visual artist boyfriend Anthony (Yahya AbdulMatee­n II), in modern day Chicago. They live in a luxury apartment in a now gentrified Cabrini-Green. But the rot of the past lingers. A longtime resident played by Colman Domingo tells Anthony about the Candyman lore and soon the haunt

ing and the body horror begin anew. “The art world is very glitzy, glamorous and Brianna is very wealthy and lives in this amazing apartment and Chicago’s a gorgeous city,” DaCosta said. “I wanted to really juxtapose that beautiful, lush world with the horrors within.”

CONVERSATI­ON STARTER

Outside of the entertainm­ent value, there is an opportunit­y to really talk about the state of the world with Candyman. There’s a history of unwanted marks becoming celebrated for reasons that we don’t want to be celebrated for. ” YAHYA ABDUL-MATEEN II ★ Actor

Abdul-Mateen II predicts Candyman will be a conversati­on-starter.

“Outside of the entertainm­ent value, there is an opportunit­y to really talk about the state of the world,” AbdulMatee­n II said. “There’s a history of unwanted marks becoming celebrated for reasons that we don’t want to be celebrated for. This movie deals with that and says what happens when you take our stories back.”

The themes aren’t just backdrops either. The script has characters discussing gentrifica­tion and privilege. One character even says white people, “Love what we make, but they don’t love us.” It was a line that DaCosta felt was especially important to have in the film.

“Sometimes you just have to make the subtext text,” DaCosta said. “It really spoke to how as long as we are behaving a certain way and as long as we’re producing something that is being consumed or has a place either in a consumeris­t way or in a respectabi­lity way, we’re fine. But once you step out of that, once...someone dares to talk back to a police officer or whatever then there is a problem.”

Although it’s a distinctly different film than Get Out, with different sensibilit­ies, Candyman is poised to inspire and provoke in similar ways. “It’s truly an examinatio­n of who we are right now in our culture and hopefully helping to move the needle and help it get better by going to these dark spaces and unpacking the terror within, the true terror,” said Domingo. “Especially the terror that people with Black and brown skin live with every day.”

The film was completed in late 2019 for a planned 2020 release but was delayed several times over the past year because of the pandemic. Domingo said after the last year of racial reckoning. it’s the perfect time for the film to come out.

“I think that it’s timely that it did not come out last year, that we needed to deal with what we were dealing with and be out on the street, raising our voices together to finally having a moment to step back and examine again,” Domingo said. “I think we’re willing to do the work now.”

Candyman will also be a breakthrou­gh moment for DaCosta, whose star is continuing to rise with higher profile studio projects.

“She really is like an old school director,” Domingo said. “She knows what she wants. She’s a very, very elegant director. You see it in every frame of this film.”

Two weeks after she wrapped Candyman, DaCosta immediatel­y went into The Marvels, a sequel to Captain Marvel, that’s expected to come out next year. The superhero pic reunites her with Parris, who plays Monica Rambeau.

DaCosta has hardly had time to take stock of her own quick ascent in an industry where Black female directors are vastly underrepre­sented in big budget filmmaking. “This is like my third movie in four years, which is crazy for any sort of person. But I remember a couple of years ago [my manager and I] were like, well five years ago this would not be my career,” DaCosta said. “I’m really grateful for it and excited that more spaces are opening up .... I’m hoping by making more movies and doing different kinds of movies that more space will be opened up for others.”

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 ?? Photos by AP ?? Director Nia DaCosta and Yahya Abdul-Mateen
II on the set of ‘Candyman’.
Nathan StewartJar­rett and Kyle Kaminsky in ‘Candyman’.
Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as Anthony McCoy.
Photos by AP Director Nia DaCosta and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II on the set of ‘Candyman’. Nathan StewartJar­rett and Kyle Kaminsky in ‘Candyman’. Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as Anthony McCoy.
 ??  ?? Colman Domingo in a scene from ‘Candyman’.
Teyonah Parris in ‘Candyman’.
Colman Domingo in a scene from ‘Candyman’. Teyonah Parris in ‘Candyman’.

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