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Candyman horror film
Candyman (film)
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Candyman
Candymanposter.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Bernard Rose
Produced by
Clive Barker
Steve Golin
Screenplay by
Bernard Rose
Based on
"The Forbidden"
by Clive Barker
Starring
Virginia Madsen
Tony Todd
Xander Berkeley
Vanessa A. Williams
Kasi Lemmons
Music by
Philip Glass
Cinematography
Anthony B. Richmond
Editing by
Dan Rae
Distributed by
TriStar Pictures
PolyGram Filmed Entertainment
Release date(s)
September 11, 1992 (Toronto Int'l Film Festival)
October 16, 1992 (US)
March 19, 1993 (UK)
Running time
99 min.
Country
United States
Language
English
Budget
$8,000,000 (estimated)[1]
Box office
$25,792,310 (sub-total)
Candyman is a 1992 American horror film starring Virginia Madsen, Tony Todd and Xander Berkeley. It was directed by Bernard Rose and is based on the short story "The Forbidden" by Clive Barker, though the film's scenario is switched from England to the Cabrini–Green public housing development on Chicago's Near North Side. The plot follows a graduate student completing a thesis on urban legends who encounters the legend of "Candyman", an artist and son of a slave who was murdered and his hand replaced with a hook.
The film was scored by Philip Glass. The film was met with critical acclaim and was a box office success. Candyman spawned two sequels, Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh and Candyman 3: Day of the Dead.
Contents
[hide] 1 Plot
2 Cast
3 Reception
4 References
5 External links
6 See also
Plot[edit]
Helen Lyle is a graduate student conducting research for her thesis on urban legends. While interviewing freshmen about their superstitions, she hears about a local legend known as Candyman. The legend contains many elements similar to the most well-known urban legends, including endangered babysitters, spirits who appear in mirrors when fatally summoned, and maniac killers with unnatural deformities.[2] The legend claims that Candyman can be summoned by saying his name five times while facing a mirror (similar to the Bloody Mary folkloric tale), whereupon he will murder the summoner with his hook-hand. Later that evening, Helen and her friend Bernadette jokingly call Candyman's name into the mirror in Helen's bathroom but nothing happens.
Helen discovers that Candyman was the son of a slave, whose father became prosperous after developing a system for mass-producing shoes during the Civil War. Candyman grew up in polite society and became a well-known artist, sought after for his talent in producing portraits. After falling in love with a white woman whom he impregnated, he was set upon by a lynch mob hired by his girlfriend's father, who cut off his painting hand and replaced it with a hook. He was smeared with honey stolen from an apiary, prompting the locals to chant 'Candyman', and the bees stung him to death.
With her colleague Bernadette, Helen enters the notorious gang-ridden Cabrini–Green housing project, the site of a recent unsolved murder, linked to Candyman. There, she meets Anne-Marie McCoy, one of the residents, and a young boy named Jake, who tells her the disturbing story of a child who was castrated in a public restroom, supposedly by Candyman. While Helen explores the run-down restroom, a gang member attacks her: he carries a hook, and has taken the Candyman moniker as his own to enhance his "street cred". Helen survives the assault and is able to identify her attacker to the police.
Helen later faces the apparent real Candyman, who explains that since Helen has been telling people he is just a legend, he must prove he exists. Helen blacks out and wakes up in Anne-Marie's apartment, covered in blood. Anne-Marie, whose Rottweiler has been decapitated, and whose baby is also missing, attacks Helen and she is forced to defend herself, using a meat cleaver. The police then arrest Helen. Trevor, Helen's husband, bails her out of jail, but Candyman appears to Helen again and cuts her neck, causing her to bleed unconscious. Bernadette then arrives at the apartment and Candyman murders her. The police are called and Helen is sedated and is placed in a psychiatric hospital pending trial.
After a month's stay at the hospital, Helen is interviewed by a psychologist in preparation for her upcoming trial. While restrained, Helen attempts to convince the psychologist that the urban legend is indeed true by calling Candyman. Candyman appears, murdering the psychologist, and Helen is able to escape. She briefly confronts Trevor but he is now living with one of his female students. Helen then flees to Cabrini–Green to confront Candyman and to locate Anne-Marie's still-missing infant. In an apartment's attic, she encounters the words "It was always you, Helen."
Candyman predicts that Helen will help carry on his tradition of inciting fear into a community, and promises to release the baby if Helen agrees to sacrifice herself. However, Candyman, intending to sacrifice them to feed his own legend, takes both the baby and Helen into the middle of a massive junk pile, which the residents have been planning to turn into a bonfire. The residents believe Candyman is hiding inside the pile and set it aflame. Helen rescues the baby, but dies from burns in the process. Candyman also burns in the fire, leaving only his hook-hand behind.
After Helen's funeral, in which the residents of Cabrini–Green pay their respects, Trevor stands before a mirror in the bathroom of their former apartment. He chants Helen's name in grief, summoning her vengeful spirit. Helen kills Trevor with Candyman's hook, leaving Trevor's new lover Stacey with his bloodied corpse as Helen becomes the embodiment of the urban legend.
The film ends as the credits roll over a painting of Helen with her hair ablaze on a wall in Cabrini-Green, showing that she has now entered folklore.
Cast[edit]
Virginia Madsen as Helen Lyle
Tony Todd as Candyman
Xander Berkeley as Trevor Lyle
Vanessa Williams as Anne-Marie McCoy
Kasi Lemmons as Bernadette 'Bernie' Walsh
DeJuan Guy as Jake
Bernard Rose as Archie Walsh
Gilbert Lewis as Detective Frank Valento
Stanley DeSantis as Dr. Burke
Ted Raimi as Billy
Eric Edwards as Harold
Rusty Schwimmer as Policewoman
Eddie Murphy was the original choice for the role of Candyman, but the filmmakers could not afford him
Reception[edit]
Candyman had its world premiere at the 1992 Toronto Film Festival, playing as part of its Midnight Madness line-up.[3]
The film has a 74% "fresh" rating at Rotten Tomatoes.[4] Allmovie praised the film, calling it "haunting, intelligent and poetic" and "the finest Barker adaptation ever committed to film".[5]
The film also came in at number 75 on Bravo's 100 Scariest Movie Moments.[6]
The character Candyman came in at number 8 on Bloody Disgusting's "The Top 13 Slashers in Horror Movie History"[7] and ranked the same on Ugo's "Top Eleven Slashers".[8] The actor who played Candyman, Tony Todd, made #53 on Retrocrush's "The 100 Greatest Horror Movie Performances" for his role.[9]
The movie appears in two sections of Filmsite.org, in "Greatest Scariest Movie Moments and Scenes"[10] and "Greatest Movie Twists, Spoilers and Surprise Endings".[11]
The film was nominated for AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills.[12]
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ "Candyman (1992)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2012-08-12.
2.Jump up ^ W. Scott Poole, Monsters in America: Our Historical Obsession with the Hideous and the Haunting (Waco, Texas: Baylor, 2011), 53-54.
3.Jump up ^ Wilner, Norman (August 13, 1992). "Midnight Madness at the movies". Toronto Star. pp. B4.
4.Jump up ^ Rotten Tomatoes - "Candyman"
5.Jump up ^ Cavett Binion. "Candyman (1992)". Allmovie. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
6.Jump up ^ 100 Scariest Movie Moments via Internet Archive
7.Jump up ^ Bloody Disgusting - "The Top 13 Slashers in Horror Movie History"
8.Jump up ^ Ugo - "Top Eleven Slashers"
9.Jump up ^ Retrocrush - "The 100 Greatest Horror Movie Performances"
10.Jump up ^ Filmsite.org - "Greatest Scariest Movie Moments and Scenes"
11.Jump up ^ Filmsite.org - "Greatest Movie Twists, Spoilers and Surprise Endings"
12.Jump up ^ AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills Ballot
External links[edit]
Candyman at the Internet Movie Database
Candyman at AllRovi
See also[edit]
Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh
Candyman 3: Day of the Dead
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Categories: 1992 films
1992 horror films
Psychological thriller films
Supernatural horror films
Slasher films
Hood films
Films set in Chicago, Illinois
Films shot in Chicago, Illinois
Films based on horror novels
Films based on urban legends
Ghost films
TriStar Pictures films
American horror films
American thriller films
1990s thriller films
English-language films
Film scores by Philip Glass
Films directed by Bernard Rose (director)
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