By the time you’ve reached the seventh film in the Children of the Corn franchise, you’re not so much watching a horror movie as you are taking part in a psychological experiment. What does it take to break a viewer’s will? How many shots of evil cornfields and spooky kids can you endure before your brain starts begging for a mercy killing? Enter Children of the Corn: Revelation—a straight-to-video offering that proves even demonic vegetation eventually runs out of fresh ideas.
Corn Again, Naturally
Our story follows Jamie Lowell (Claudette Mink), who arrives in Omaha, Nebraska, after her grandmother stops answering the phone. Pro tip: if your grandma doesn’t pick up for a few days, maybe just assume she’s binging Jeopardy!reruns instead of assuming she’s been sucked into a corn-based cult. But Jamie is no quitter—she investigates the apartment building, conveniently located next to (wait for it) a cornfield.
The building is full of weirdos straight out of “Discount David Lynch Casting Call”:
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Jerry the landlord, who looks like he’s running a pyramid scheme on the side.
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A stripper named Tiffany, because God forbid we have a horror movie without gratuitous nudity.
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An old man in a wheelchair whose primary character trait is yelling at people.
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Stan, a gun-toting loner, who has “dies before the third act” written all over him.
And of course, there are the children—silent, pale, and as menacing as kids waiting in line at a Chuck E. Cheese. They roam the hallways like spectral squatters, occasionally strangling someone with corn, because apparently Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes wasn’t creepy enough.
The Cornfield Strikes Back
This entry’s “lore expansion” is that Jamie’s grandmother was once part of a child-preacher death cult, led by a boy named Abel. The cult burned themselves alive years ago on the site where the apartment building now stands. Grandma survived, which makes her the Final Girl of a flashback we never asked for. Now Abel and his pint-sized disciples are back, haunting Omaha like the least intimidating street gang in cinematic history.
The big reveal? Jamie’s grandmother is somehow reincarnated as one of the creepy kids. Yes, Nana has de-aged into a corn ghost, but don’t worry—she still speaks in her old woman voice, which is less scary and more like your babysitter trying to prank-call you.
Highlights of Unintentional Comedy
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The BBQ of Doom
Jerry invites Jamie to a rooftop cookout where he bites into a cob of corn filled with blood. Instead of calling 911 or screaming, Jerry just stands there until the kids push him off the roof. Corn on the cob: nature’s deadliest snack. -
Death by Bathtub Corn
Tiffany the stripper meets her end when a child strangles her in the tub—with corn. Not a knife, not a rope, but produce. Nothing says “terrifying slasher” like getting murdered by side dishes. -
Wheelchair Acrobatics
The cranky old man gets shoved over a stairwell in his wheelchair by the ghost kids. It’s supposed to be horrifying, but it plays out like a slapstick blooper reel from Jackass: Geriatric Edition. -
Elevator Heart Attack
Stan, our gun-toting loner, is trapped in an elevator by the kids. They don’t stab him, don’t strangle him—no, they just scare him until he has a fatal heart attack. That’s right: the killer corn cult’s deadliest weapon is poor cardiovascular health. -
Abel the Budget Supervillain
The big bad Abel can control corn stalks and tie people up with them. Imagine Poison Ivy, but instead of seducing Batman, she just attacks random Midwestern renters.
Michael Ironside, Why Are You Here?
Every Children of the Corn sequel needs one “real” actor to trick unsuspecting viewers into thinking it might be watchable. Here, it’s Michael Ironside, slumming it as a mysterious priest who delivers exposition like he’s ordering a cheeseburger. He shows up, mutters about “He Who Walks Behind the Rows,” and disappears. Honestly, you get the sense Ironside filmed all his scenes in a single afternoon and then cashed the check to buy something more worthwhile—like silence.
The Apartment as a Setting: From Bland to Blander
Unlike earlier entries that at least tried to milk atmosphere from endless cornfields, this one is mostly set inside a dingy apartment building. The horror? Wallpaper that hasn’t been updated since the Nixon administration. Oh, and occasionally a corn stalk pops out of the floor like it’s auditioning for Little Shop of Horrors. It’s less “haunted house” and more “landlord who ignores maintenance requests.”
The Climax: Pop Goes the Weasel (and the Corn)
The finale has Jamie tied up by corn stalks while Abel and his mini-minions try to convince her to join their ghostly after-school club. Instead, she triggers a gas explosion, blowing up the building in what’s clearly stock footage spliced with dollar-store CGI. Abel, naturally, survives being blown up, because nothing kills bad horror franchises faster than closure. Detective Armbrister (a name that sounds like a rejected Police Academy character) saves Jamie at the last second, and together they flee as the building collapses.
It’s implied the kids’ souls are “freed.” Freed to do what? Haunt future sequels, of course.
Revelation: None Found
Calling this film Revelation is false advertising. Nothing is revealed except that this franchise should have been euthanized several sequels ago. The kids aren’t scary. The corn isn’t scary. The kills aren’t scary. The only frightening part is realizing you spent 90 minutes watching this when you could have been staring at actual cornfields and gotten more entertainment.
Why This Fails (Beyond the Obvious)
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Zero Atmosphere: Even SyFy Channel originals have more tension.
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Generic Lead: Claudette Mink tries, but Jamie is written like cardboard taped to a scream track.
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Derivative Plot: It’s basically Poltergeist meets Children of the Corn, but stripped of everything fun.
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Wasted Potential: Omaha deserves better.
Final Verdict
Children of the Corn: Revelation isn’t a revelation—it’s a resignation. A resignation to lazy scripts, recycled lore, and special effects that look like they were rendered on a Speak & Spell. It’s not frightening, it’s not thrilling, and it’s barely coherent.
If you’re looking for horror, this ain’t it. But if you’re curious how far a franchise can sink when it’s long past its expiration date, grab some popcorn (careful, it might be haunted) and marvel at the miracle that someone thought the world needed a seventh entry about demonic farm kids.
