Creepy new ‘Candyman’ movie indicts gentrification as the real horror
Who can take a sunrise and sprinkle it with … dread?
All seems well in the initial moments of “Candyman,” the modern-day remake of the 1992 horror classic, which opens with the sweet sounds of Sammy Davis Jr.’s classic “The Candy Man.”
But then𝓡 the song — and the film itself — slowly becomes a spooky nightmare.
“We love doing stuff like that,” producer and “Candyman” co-writer Win Rosenfeld told The Post. Twisting an otherwise innocent pop song has become a signature of his production company, Monkeypaw, which he runs with Jordan Peele. The team did the same kind of creepy remix of Luniz’s “I Got 5 On It” in the trailer for the company’s breakout hit “Get Out.”
The team’s new “Candyman” is a decidedly contemporary tale. Referred to by the filmmakers as a “spiritual sequel” to the original — actor Tony Todd returns to play the eponymous killer character — it features a diverse cast (including black leads and a gay couple) and deals with issues of class and gentrification in the real-lif🍌e neighborhood of Chicago’s Cabrini-Green.
After the most recent film in the franchise, 1999’s “Candyman: Day of the Dead,” bombed at the box office (it holds a 10% fresh rating on ), Peele resurrected the series, backed by his proven horror track record, including the box offic🙈e successes of “Get Out” and “Us.” 🐲;
“We like to play with stories that are mythical and magical, but in a grounded way,” said Rosenfeld, noting that the themes in “Candyman” were ripe for him and Peele to mine.
While the 1992 original was loosely based around the idea of gentrification around the Cabrini-Green area — Chicago’s most notorious housing project, since torn down — the new version (directed by New York City native Nia DaCosta) intimately explores the idea of the transformation of a Chicago neighborhood through the eyes of its conflicted main character, Anthony McCoy, a visual artist who was formerly a resident of the projects.
McCoy, played by the Emmy-winning “Watchmen” breakout star Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, is a 🐈conflicted soul. Now livin💖g in a swank loft built where the Cabrini-Green projects once stood, he haplessly summons the murderous Candyman while mining for artistic inspiration.
“Artists and culture makers are always the first wave of a changing neighborhood as they can afford the less expensive rent, ☂and then developers move in,” said Rosenfeld of the inspiration behind McCoy. “Our movie embodies the idea of a black man from a lower income neighborhood who now lives with a wealthy woman with family money. So there can be a lot of complexity.”
Rosenfeld, whose credits also include producing Peele’s “Twilight Zone” remake as well as the 2018 Oscar favorite “BlacKkKlansman,” notes that since 1992, issues of gentrification in Chicago and elsewhere have only been exacerbated. Natives of New York, Rosꦦenfeld, Peele and fellow producer Ian Cooper all met while students at Manhattan’s Calhoun School and saw firsthand how a neighbor💖hood can change.
“I think most movies oversimplify the idea of gentrifica🔴tion,” Cooper, who grew up in SoHo⛎ and Red Hook, told The Post.
Adding layers to the complexity is the explosion of social justice movements in the past two years, a prescient topic as the film was originally set to be released in what would have been the midst of the George Floyd protests in J🤪une 2020 — until 🧸the COVID-19 pandemic delayed its release for more than a year.
“It was uncanny that this film that [director] Nia DaCosta crafted, which speaks to the unending cycle of violence in America against black bodies, was being mirrored in reality,” said Cooper. “I’m relieved it’s not being released at a moment of national inflammation. At least there’s been a beat since then.’’
Here’s how the modern-day “Candyman” stacks up against the 1992 original.
A shift in perspective
1992: Protagonists are a white woman (Virginia Madsen) and h🍸er husband (Xander Berkeley).
2021: The film is told from the perspec꧂tive of a black couple, played by Yah♕ya Abdul Mateen II and Teyonah Parris.
Scary soundtrack
1992: The original filmಌ was uniquely scored by Philip Glass. “It 𝓀was a really incredible, repetitive and circular soundtrack,” noted producer Ian Cooper.
2021: To match the uniqueness of Glass, the filmmakers recruitꩵed the New York-based composer and sound artist Robert A.A. Lowe (a k a Lichens) to concoct an equally inventive score. “He’s not so dissimilar to Glass in that scoring films isn’t the main thing he does.”
Callback cast
1992: Veteran actress V🌳anessa Williams co-stars, her se🎐cond-ever film role.
2021: 29 yearꩵs later, Williams returns after a career which has recently seen her in recurring roles in “Days o💯f Our Lives” and “The L Word: Generation Q.”
Windy City locales
1992: While t🔯he original fi🧜lm took place in Chicago, the bulk of production took place in Los Angeles.
2021: The film is as authentically Chicago as a deep🍬 dish pizza. “We shot our entire movie there,” said C🥂ooper.