Candyman | Image

While the 1992 original focused on the "white gaze" through Helen Lyle's perspective, Nia DaCosta’s 2021 sequel shifts the focus to the Black community's experience .

Features a singular, towering figure (Tony Todd) haunting the decaying Cabrini-Green. Candyman image

Introduces the idea of a "swarm" of Candymen—multiple Black men who were unwilling martyrs to systemic violence, making the image a symbol of generational pain. Art as a Central Theme While the 1992 original focused on the "white

The imagery of Candyman—the hook, the bees, and the fur-collared trench coat—is deeply rooted in a tragic backstory of racial violence. Originally Daniel Robitaille, a 19th-century artist, he was murdered by a lynch mob who cut off his painting hand and covered him in honey to be stung by bees. Art as a Central Theme The imagery of

In both films, art is the bridge to the legend. In the original, Helen crawls through a mural of Candyman’s mouth , symbolizing her descent into the myth. In the sequel, artist Anthony McCoy’s work literally summons the entity, illustrating how Black trauma is often exploited for consumption in the art world. Out of the Shadows: Candyman & Chicago