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  1. Children of the Corn

    Children of the Corn

    R1984 · Horror · 1h 33m

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  1. Box office. $14.6 million [1] Children of the Corn (advertised as Stephen King's Children of the Corn) is a 1984 American supernatural horror film based on Stephen King 's 1977 short story of the same name. Directed by Fritz Kiersch, the film's cast consists of Peter Horton, Linda Hamilton, John Franklin, Courtney Gains, Robby Kiger, Anne Marie ...

    • March 9, 1984
  2. Mar 9, 1984 · Children of the Corn: Directed by Fritz Kiersch. With Peter Horton, Linda Hamilton, R.G. Armstrong, John Franklin. A young couple is trapped in a remote town where a dangerous religious cult of children believes that everyone over age 18 must be killed.

    • (56K)
    • Horror, Thriller
    • Fritz Kiersch
    • 1984-03-09
  3. Children of the Corn (1984) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  4. As physician Burt Stanton (Peter Horton) and his girlfriend, Vicky (Linda Hamilton), drive across the Midwest to his new job, their trip comes to a sudden halt when they encounter the body of a ...

    • (2.2K)
    • Fritz Kiersch
    • R
    • Peter Horton
  5. Isaac, through his lieutenant Malachai (Courtney Gains), leads the children of the town in a revolution, brutally killing all of the adults in the town. Over the ensuing years, the children take any adults passing through as sacrifices. Three years later, Burt (Peter Horton) and his girlfriend Vicky (Linda Hamilton) pass through Nebraska while ...

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  7. Children of the Corn (advertised as Stephen King's Children of the Corn) is a 1984 American horror film film based upon Stephen King’s 1977 short story Children of the Corn. Directed by Fritz Kiersch, the film's cast consists of Peter Horton, Linda Hamilton, John Franklin, Courtney Gains, Robby Kiger, Anne Marie McEvoy, Julie Maddalena, and R. G. Armstrong. Set in the fictitious rural town ...

  8. Screenplay by. George Goldsmith. “Children of the Corn” is a movie about a thing that lives behind the rows of corn. I am not sure if the thing is a god, a spirit, or John Deere crossed with a mole. All I know is that you can see it coming. It plows along about a foot underneath the surface, racing angrily up and down the cornfields.

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