Candyman

2010

Action / Biography / Documentary

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
703.83 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 16 min
P/S ...
1.28 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 16 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by view_and_review7 / 10

The Creation of the Gourmet Jelly Bean

As long as I can remember Jelly Bellys have been the premier jelly bean. Every other jelly bean was a stale, uni-flavored, sugary mass whereas Jelly Bellys had distinct, unique, wonderful flavors. I'm in my room staring at a candy dispenser full of Jelly Bellys right now. Who invented Jelly Bellys never crossed my mind. I figured they were spit out of the boardroom of some company and it just worked. I certainly didn't know a quirky guy named David Klein was the brains behind the Jelly Belly brand.

"Candyman: The David Klein Story" is about the creation of the Jelly Belly brand and how it became a product of the Goelitz Candy Company. The documentary is a little scattered at times because it hinges on the storytelling of David Klein, an eccentric and "unusual" man, but it gives you enough information to know about Jelly Belly.

I don't think this documentary would interest many people who are not into Jelly Belly. They don't go into how it's made, there wasn't a grand conspiracy to steal it, and nobody died under suspicious circumstances. It's just about an upbeat and offbeat kind of guy who came up with an idea around 1976 that people like me enjoy to this day.

Reviewed by MartinHafer4 / 10

Could somebody tell me WHY Weird Al was in this film...?

This is a mildly--very mildly interesting documentary about the guy who invented Jelly Belly candy and basically threw the company away for practically nothing. My biggest question about the film is not about this guy but why was Weird Al in the film in various guest spots? Did he have some connection to the company or the candy industry? I assume not, as his clips seemed to come from left field. Other than providing information about the candy being is vegetarian-friendly (but not vegan-friendly),I didn't understand that. Now I am NOT anti-Al--heck, I went to his last concert when it came to town. But I just didn't see the connection between him and David Klein or Jelly Belly.

The film begins with Klein coming up with the idea of the candy as well as the initial difficulties he had marketing the candy. Then, it chronicles how the candy took off as well as the confusing story about why he sold his company for an incredibly small sum--even at the time when it was a much smaller company. The rest of the film seems to talk about how unsuccessful he was following this but how he's really a great guy. However, this confused me, as there was one BRIEF clip in which Klein's son talked about how the guy displaced his anger on his son when he was growing up. Apparently Klein sold his company without even having a lawyer involved during this process--and today has very little to show for it! This displacement did NOT fit with the guy the rest of the film portrayed--and it left me confused.

All in all, an okay documentary but one I found not all that compelling. While the film seemed to want the viewer to feel sorry for the guy, I couldn't help but think he was just a bit...well...foolish.

Reviewed by yastepanov5 / 10

A Fool and his business were parted

I want to feel sorry for David Klein, but I can't.

He created a fantastic product: The Jelly Belly jellybean, but he seems purely unsuited to either running a business or even getting decent advice.

Had this man (who attended law school) simply hired a lawyer, he could have probably retained a small minority share in what is Jelly Belly today and been rich. He didn't. At every turn, when confronted with a situation, he seems to have taken the quick but easy way.

To be honest, David Klein invented the Jelly Belly, but then he more or less stopped. He is NOT responsible for the massive success of the company, but wants to be treated as if he was.

He wanted his contract manufacturing company to expand -- with them taking all the risk -- and was surprised when they turned the tables on him.

Since the story is one-sided and still doesn't make him out to be much of a sympathetic character.

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