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CANDYMAN

★ ★ ★ 1/2

R, 91 minutes. Waterford, Lisbon.

Skyscraper­s loom upside down out of the fog, drifting by from an odd perspectiv­e, as if from the point of view of someone on a gurney, or perhaps a spectral presence regarding these buildings occupying land that’s been stolen, developed, appropriat­ed, allocated, gentrified and redevelope­d again. This is the Chicago of Nia DaCosta’s “Candyman,” a reboot/sequel to the 1992 horror film directed by Bernard Rose. DaCosta’s film builds upon the horrors imagined by the original, which introduced the terrifying imagery of a man with a hook, surrounded by bees, a monster forged in racist violence, a mysterious figure and an urban legend that gives meaning to the horrors of a ghetto manufactur­ed by white supremacy. DaCosta, who made her directoria­l debut with the remarkable abortion drama “Little Woods,” firmly announces herself as an artist at work with “Candyman,” a genuinely terrifying and artful horror film that speaks with a bell-clear voice to the current moment, which is the product of centuries of racist power structures. While the original centered a white woman in this story of the horrors of the African American experience (and indeed, the white woman is often an incendiary and complicit figure in those tales), DaCosta’s film, which she wrote with producers Jordan Peele and Win Rosenfeld, centers a Black man, an artist named Anthony McCoy (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II). In “Candyman,” a Black man occupies the space of both the villain and the victim, sliding between persecuted and monstrous identities; horror tropes as social commentary. This “Candyman” functions best as sequel, with the story of the original film acting as the inciting myth, the urban legend of the grad student who went to the hood to learn about Candyman (rendered spookily with puppet silhouette­s, an ongoing motif). It’s relayed like all scary stories are, an oral tradition passed on by candleligh­t, as told by Troy (Nathan Stewart-Jarrett) to his sister Brianna (Teyonah Parris) and her boyfriend Anthony, during a dinner party. The story takes hold of Anthony, a painter struggling to find new inspiratio­n, and he heads to the old housing projects of Cabrini Green searching for answers.

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