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‘Children of the Corn’ Rights Battle Begins

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CHILDREN OF THE CORN

While this isn’t exactly the same as the ongoing battle for Friday the 13th, the Weinstein Company is now fighting to retain the rights to Children of the Corn.

Variety reported last night that Producer Donald Borchers filed a federal copyright suit on Thursday, alleging that he and not The Weinstein Company owns the sequel rights to Children of the Corn.

Borchers produced the original 1984 film, based on the Stephen King short story about a cult of murderous children. He also wrote and directed a 2009 TV adaptation.

A bit of history as Miramax acquired rights to the franchise in 1994 and produced several sequels under the Dimension Films label, many of them went straight to video, beginning with Children of the Corn IV: The Gathering in 1996, all the way through the eighth installment in 2011.

Borchers has also been seeking to reboot the franchise since about 2004. In the lawsuit, Borchers says he initially approached Miramax with the idea of remaking the original film. At the time, he says he was told that Miramax had lost interest in the franchise because it no longer performed theatrically and the video business was slowing down. According to Borchers, Miramax liked the idea of a remake, but quickly discovered that it had failed to secure the remake rights to the original film. So, without telling Borchers, the company acquired those rights from Park Avenue Entertainment, the lawsuit states.

In 2016, Borchers wrote a spec script for a film “spinoff” of Children of the Corn, and tried to license those rights from Dimension, now a subsidiary of The Weinstein Company. Dimension did not confirm whether it held those rights, and Borchers alleges he later determined that Park Avenue had in fact reserved them. Borchers says he has recently acquired the spinoff rights once held by Park Avenue, and informed Dimension of this. Dimension contests Borchers’ claim, according to the suit.

Borchers is now suing to confirm that he holds the rights.

“Absent this Court’s declaration of Borchers’ rights, and a resolution of legal uncertainties, he cannot submit any production, including a spinoff, for Copyright registration without concern for engaging in a potentially unlawful use or facing criminal liability,” the suit states. “And, if Borchers is able to produce, because the Defendants have denied, or refused to acknowledge, his rights, Borchers faces a potential infringement action by the Defendants.”

The article is a bit confusing as it both states Borchers is battling for sequel and spinoff rights, and I’m sure the shelved sequel Children of the Corn: Runaway has something to do with this breaking news.

Horror movie fanatic who co-founded Bloody Disgusting in 2001. Producer on Southbound, V/H/S/2/3/94, SiREN, Under the Bed, and A Horrible Way to Die. Chicago-based. Horror, pizza and basketball connoisseur. Taco Bell daily. Franchise favs: Hellraiser, Child's Play, A Nightmare on Elm Street, Halloween, Scream and Friday the 13th. Horror 365 days a year.

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Five Found Footage Horror Movies to Stream This Week

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Banshee Chapter - found footage horror movies
Pictured: 'Banshee Chapter'

When done well, found footage horror makes for one of the most immersive and unnerving viewing experiences. The inherent naturalism tends to make the horror feel more plausible and real. Found footage horror doesn’t need a huge budget or recognizable names among the cast to induce chills, either, and the lo-fi visuals only further add to the scares.

This week’s streaming picks are dedicated to found footage horror movies that excel with the format, delivering unsettling atmosphere and scares while making the most of their immersive, lo-fi aesthetics. Here’s where you can stream them this week.

For more Stay Home, Watch Horror picks, click here.


Banshee Chapter – SCREAMBOX, the Roku Channel, Tubi

Banshee Chapter

Drawing inspiration from actual government hallucinogenic drug experiments and H.P. Lovecraft’s From Beyond, Blair Erickson’s feature debut is part found footage, part faux documentary. After her friend’s sudden disappearance, journalist Anne Roland (Katia Winter) discovers the strange and horrifying links between her friend, a government conspiracy involving a research drug, and an eerie radio broadcast of otherworldly origin. Where From Beyond went for practical effects-driven spectacle, Banshee Chapter opts for a quiet, menacing atmosphere. It’s effectively creepy. Look for The Silence of the Lambs’ Ted Levine to steal every scene he’s in, but more than that, be ready for some great scares. 


Ghostwatch – AMC+, Shudder

Ghostwatch Gillian Bevan Michael Parkinson

Upon initial airing, this made-for-TV movie stirred up controversy for the BBC, as the special Halloween event had viewers convinced that what they’d witnessed was real. It plays like a live TV special with a camera crew on-site attempting to investigate the truth behind the most haunted house in the country, one that borrows heavily from the Enfield Poltergeist. Neither they nor the viewer were prepared for the scares that would ensue—even the subtle ones. Pay close attention to every frame; Pipes hides in plain sight. Don’t skip this one, as it’s a streaming rarity.


Grave Encounters – freevee, Plex, Pluto TV, the Roku Channel, Tubi Vudu

Grave Encounters

A ghost-hunting reality TV crew get more than they bargained for when they explore an abandoned psychiatric hospital for their latest episode. The Vicious Brothers (Colin Minihan and Stuart Ortiz) take full advantage of the creepy setting and unleash serious, unending scares. More than typical haunted house fare, they take the narrative to mind-bending places. Grave Encounters makes for one of the more substantial and memorable entries in found footage horror.


The Medium – AMC+, Hoopla, Shudder

The Medium

Producer and co-writer Na Hong-jin’s follow-up to The Wailing continues the exploration of faith and clashing beliefs. Only this time, it’s a documentary-style nightmare set in Thailand. Co-writer/Director Banjong Pisanthanakun (Shutter) bides his time introducing the characters and setting in this slow-burn possession tale, layering in subtle background scares and atmosphere at first. Then it builds. Eerie found footage-style video of Mink’s nighttime activity grows more disturbing. Even still, it can’t prepare for the absolute insanity of the climax, delivering an onslaught of spiritual exposition and gruesome horrors with a melancholic finish.


Savageland – SCREAMBOX, Tubi, Vudu

Savageland found footage

The population of a small, Arizona-Mexico border town gets wiped out overnight, and the sole suspect is an amateur photographer. The answers and startling horror unfold through the photographer’s film roll in this documentary-style found footage entry. The micro budget effort gives a unique spin on a well-trodden subgenre of horror to creepy effect, with the images far more effective at inducing fear than jump scares. What’s more is that Savageland isn’t afraid to use its found footage setup to explore the socio-political aspect of its setting, reflected in its talking heads. Don’t expect the mysterious premise to neatly explain everything, though.

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