2021 has been a fantastic year for horror, so-much-so that we could fill this list several times over.
Nia DaCosta's 'Candyman' is the first movie directed by a Black woman to open at No. 1 at the United States box office, raking in $22.3 million.
Rising star Yahya Abdul-Mateen II talks to Yahoo about his starring role in the new Candyman film.
From blockbusters to Oscar contenders and with plenty of delayed 2020 films, the next 12 months will be very busy indeed.
There are plenty of familiar favourites alongside a host of exciting original movies from brilliant filmmakers to ease us into winter.
Tony Todd, the titular star of 1992’s Candyman, has promised that the upcoming reboot of the beloved supernatural slasher film will deliver.
Universal has shuffled the release dates of some its big horror films.
The minimalist animated 'Candyman' trailer tells the story of violence against black people.
After terrifying a generation of 90s kids, the Candyman is back.
The first ominous – and slightly disturbing – poster for the 2020 sequel to horror classic Candyman has arrived.
The year in film for 2019 is nearly over — pending Star Wars, Cats, and Jumanji of course — with the movie industry delivering dozens of memorable films, whether for good or bad reasons.But now it’s time to put the movies of 2019 to one side and take a look at the year to come. It’s a year without the Star Wars mega-franchise and with the Marvel Cinematic Universe undergoing a period of reinvention as the dust settles in the wake of the biggest movie ever made.There are plenty of blockbusters to look forward to in the coming 12 months, but there’s also an entire Oscar season to work through and a whole host of interesting, smaller movies that will make a big impression when they land in cinemas.Here are just 50 of the best films to keep an eye out for next year.Read more:Look back at the most anticipated films for 2019Most incredible actor transformations of 2019Notable Hollywood deaths in 2019
Kasi Lemmons portrayed the ill-fated Bernadette in the original 1992 'Candyman' movie.
Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, last seen as Black Manta in the WB/DC Comics blockbuster film Aquaman, is in talks to take on the lead role in the Candyman sequel from MGM and producers Jordan Peele via his Monkeypaw Productions banner, and Win Rosenfeld. Nia DaCosta is at the helm, directing from a script co-written by Peele and Rosenfeld. The reboot of the 1992 horror classic is being billed as a "spiritual sequel" to the original and returns to the neighborhood where the legend…
“Little Woods” director and writer Nia DaCosta has been tapped to helm “Candyman,” a new retelling of the classic horror pic with Jordan Peele, Win Rosenfeld, and MGM producing. The film, a “spiritual sequel” to the original, returns to the neighborhood where the legend began: the now-gentrified section of Chicago where the Cabrini-Green housing projects […]
The movie which made a generation of teenagers afraid of bathroom mirrors (and bees) is set for a remake.