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If you're
willing to buy that the beautiful Sage Hall somewhere likely in her
early thirties is the mother of a man also in his early thirties, then
"Candy" might just tickle your funny bone as something of a creepy and
unusual horror short film. The appeal of "Candy" is Hall's directorial
style in which she enlists her experience as a video artist to paint a
vivid and often uneasy little portrait of a family celebrating
Halloween. Hall plays Candy, the curvaceous but coddling mother to her
son who experiences jealousy and resentment when he brings home his
girlfriend to get in on the festivities.
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She takes issue with the girl's
donation of pre-wrapped store bought brownies, she refuses
to believe her son would indulge in a date, questions the
girl's virginity, and even goes so far as humiliating him
with baby pictures to keep her desires at bay.
Hall's
visual style is superb often shifting from tones of black
and white to color, introducing dabs of reds and blues every
so often and using the editing as a means of expressing
emotions and the psychological ticks the possessive mother
Candy has for her son. |
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The entirety of the
film involves Candy's war with her son for his love as they do battle
back and forth obsessing over baked goods and the holiday, with his
girlfriend looking on and trying to keep him within her clutches from
the dominant and intrusive Candy. What's revealed in the final scene is
pretty much explanatory of the age difference among Candy and her son,
and is a wicked little nod for horror fans who appreciate the holiday of
Halloween. Hall is a director clearly capable of using the camera as a
means of expressing key emotions for her characters and "Candy" is
ultimately a little treat for the horror fans that I watched twice.
Hall has a lot of
potential to be a visually brilliant independent director implementing
editing and colors quite well and relying on her experience as a video
artist to convey her characters actions and justify her vision. "Candy"
is a very solid short horror film, and one worth checking out.
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