Ramone Wagner
01/27/2021
Blog Assignment #3
In this blog assignment, I will highlight the brief yet, superbly intricate analysis of the great movie Candyman, both its original version of 1992 as well as the newest one of 2021, comparing and contrasting the two. The story of Candyman is vaguely familiar to plenty of us, as it haunted our Halloweens each year-round. According to Professor Due and other critiques, many figure the original Candyman wasn’t intended for a Black gaze but rather for its white audience, in spite of having plenty of Black characters. However, nonetheless it was a very personal experience for Black viewers just being one of the first times seeing so much black representation within horror. The original movie, in terms of thematics, alludes to an idea of demonizing and ostracizing blackness within certain civil societies, specifically Black masculinity and its monstrous portrayal. The original script was said to have a focus on Helen, the white protagonist as the monster, just as the movie ends, unlike her lackluster role within the plot of the newer edition. Professor, before dissecting more, plights us with more excerpts from the Horror Noire documentary in which she, Peele, and company emphasize the thought process going into and aftereffects/impacts of the original Candyman. Peele mentions that Candyman as one of the first Black supernatural killer within film at the time. The characters origin introduces the referencing of historical American racial violence as we learn that the villain/monster that is Candyman is actually that of a mere black artist who fell in love with a white lover, and thus lynched for it, and turned into this nuisance, It was said to be directed based on a short story set in the UK, however its original focus of a discourse within the bounds of class, changed to that racial violence within America theme, a personification of that if you will. They lastly highlight how many elements of the original were a recipe for being problematic and how those were avoided intentionally for the movie's newest edition. The 2021 MonkeyPaw directed Candyman was a rejuvenation of the folklore, with its elemental emphasis to alleviate new ideas to drive such a plot. Professor displays the Candyman roundtable discussion over at Universal studies, where they discuss themes of the film diving into the phenomena that was a monster described as one single entity when in actuality being a personification of this racial terror through generations. Adding the layer that is intergenerational trauma as the recurring and haunting beast, creates the changed angle that is reframing of the Candyman legend through a black lens now, rather than its original white lens. “They love what we make but not us”, was one the many profound lines that they indulged in unpacking, alluding to the mishandling and neglect of blackness in America, but specifically within the contexts of creating.