1980. A trio of young men in a peaceful US small town has a very dubious
Halloween tradition: beating up or otherwise abusing the developmentally
challenged Jacob (Nate Chaney). This time around, they even bring guests in form
of a girlfriend (Madison Russ) who isn’t at all happy about any of this and
grown-up town asshole Gus (Sky Elobar). Oh, they – or really, mostly the
ringleader, the local sheriff’s son Mike (Jimothy Beckholt) – also manage to
kill Jacob this time around.
But don’t you worry, Jacob has been more or less adopted by the fall carnival
that’s in town, and its leader, one Dr. Death (Pancho Molar) – or Lester, if you
want to be prosaic – has just the right ritual for the occasion, bringing Jacob
back as an undead avenger. You can imagine what’s going to happen, even though
Mike’s dad the Sheriff (Courtney Gains) isn’t half bad for small town police in
a horror movie.
Halloween-themed low budget horror movies are a dime a dozen now; most of
them never find their way onto my blog because getting down on dreadful
semi-professional productions is neither fun nor interesting to do (unless I
find a movie truly annoying, or think it owes me for my time). Josh
Hasty’s Candy Corn (or rather Josh Hasty’s Candy Corn going by
the title credits, but I won’t) is actually a pleasant surprise in this
regard.
It’s not a perfect film, suffering from the usual problems of its budget
bracket. You probably know the drill: some of the actors in minor roles are less
than ideal, there’s a bit of shooting around locations and crowds the film can’t
afford to actually show all that much, the editing’s slightly off in some
transitions – though acting and editing are otherwise at least fine, often
better.
However, these are not problems that kill a film, at least not in my
book, and Candy Corn does much more right than it does wrong in a lot
of other respects. While there are quite a few nods to the genre traditions
you’d expect a film like this to nod towards (starting with the title font
looking right out of John Carpenter’s original Halloween), it is not
the gore fest with no interest in its characters you’d imagine, but seems most
interested in the impact of the deaths on the characters around them, spending
quite a bit of time on the reaction of these small town cops who don’t usually
even carry weapons to the murders, as well as showing many a scene of characters
stunned by the aftermath of undead Jacob’s violence. Which actually does
something rather interesting, turning this from a tale about a vengeance from
the grave an audience can be emotionally satisfied by into one that’s more
disquieting, a tale where everyone loses.
This interest in doing actual character work can also be seen in the way the
film treats Dr. Death – in a fine performance by Moler - and his relationship to
the other carnies (Tony Todd guest-stars as one, because he has been cursed by
some eldritch abomination to be in every horror movie), portraying a guy who has
been twisted by past bad experiences, and probably truly believes he’s doing the
right thing, but also uses this emotional baggage to employ control over his
peers. It’s all rather complex for what could be a very straightforward little
slasher movie, and for my tastes, this added complexity makes up for the
aforementioned flaws quite well.
Sunday, January 26, 2020
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