I think one of the greatest strengths of CANDYMAN is also what makes it not work perfectly as a social commentary: a feeling of dreamlike logic behind the supernatural occurrences. Like a dream, it has the feeling of hitting larger ideas, bubbling beneath the surface, but only flirts with them in a visceral and upsetting way, rather than anything didactic.
This is what makes it such a masterpiece of Gothic horror.
However, I'd still say the subtext that is there is heavily indebted to the racial divide between the protagonist and her surroundings. Ultimately, the film is about pulling the rug of white privilege out from under her and having the spectre of racism upend her life. It's no longer something academic or on the other side of the tracks, it's her life.
That said, there's no reason why it took 3 sequels to finally get black leads of a Candyman. One can easily accuse the original of being blind to its own bias due to the lens it chose to frame its narrative around, but it did build that narrative as authentically and honestly as it could (the same cannot be said of it's sequels).
Unfortunately, the new Candyman IS fairly didactic and contradicts itself without the dream-like flow to defend itself. It's well directed and the best sequel, but does very little to step out of the shadow of the original and is probably even more blind to its bias...
This is what makes it such a masterpiece of Gothic horror.
However, I'd still say the subtext that is there is heavily indebted to the racial divide between the protagonist and her surroundings. Ultimately, the film is about pulling the rug of white privilege out from under her and having the spectre of racism upend her life. It's no longer something academic or on the other side of the tracks, it's her life.
WARNING: spoilers below
This makes her sacrifice to save black child, being burnt as an effigy, and becoming a symbol of evil all the more potent. It's an element that would be lost if it were another race and would dampen the impact.
That said, there's no reason why it took 3 sequels to finally get black leads of a Candyman. One can easily accuse the original of being blind to its own bias due to the lens it chose to frame its narrative around, but it did build that narrative as authentically and honestly as it could (the same cannot be said of it's sequels).
Unfortunately, the new Candyman IS fairly didactic and contradicts itself without the dream-like flow to defend itself. It's well directed and the best sequel, but does very little to step out of the shadow of the original and is probably even more blind to its bias...
WARNING: spoilers below
Shifting virtually all of the victims to shitty, racist white people and ultimately turning Candyman into a being of righteous, racial vengeance undercuts what works about the original and lessens the horror of the situation.