You know what the original Children of the Corn lacked?
Sufficiently disagreeable characters, ones you could really un-sympathize with.
Well, the remake offers them in abundance, both in the pre- and post- pubescent
forms. But it’s ok, ‘cause it all means something.
A couple with marital troubles hit the road for a second
honeymoon (but the lawyer with the divorce papers is just 70 miles
that-a-way!). We get to sit in the car with them while they bicker endlessly. Both
of them have a point: I wouldn’t want to be married to either of these a-holes.
She’s one of those nagging wives who like to twist the dagger whenever her
husband is down in any way. He’s one of those jerks who never, ever compromise
on anything at all and he has that good ol’ Vietnam PTSD on top of it.
You forget you’re not watching a Lifetime movie, because the
kids don’t show up to terrorize these douchebags until the last 30 minutes. The
weird thing about the last 30 minutes is, once the action kicks in, the Vietnam
vet loves it. He doesn’t care what’s happened to his wife or what’s going on in
this town. He’s enjoying the combat tactics and the blood on his hands. He
kills kids left and right with a gusto you can only describe as hilarious. Who
would want to divorce this guy?
But that’s the problem with America. We’re always searching
for the enemy ‘out there.’ But the real enemy is inside, right here, in the
heartland. It’s in our minds, like the PTSD. And it’s in the soul of our
country , like the—yep, you guessed it, the goddam corn!
America is a corn-crazy nation. The government subsidizes
corn production with billions of dollars (nearly twenty billions, in fact),
whereas the second-most subsidized crop, apples, gets less than one billion.
Vegetables like broccoli ain’t doing so hot. What the fuck do we do with all
that damn corn? Well, we convert it into an unhealthy form of sugar called
high-fructose corn syrup. Not good for you, but it’s so damn cheap because of
the subsidies. It’s because of this that you can buy a box of Twinkies for less
than a bag of apples or carrots. It’s ass-over-tea-kettle backwards. This corn
production is reducing our lifespans. It may be plausible to imagine a world
where only kids are alive, ‘cause adults have all been sacrificed… to the corn.
Or to eating Twinkies. Whatever. Point is, are we not all ‘children of the
corn,’ in some sense?
At least, I think the movie was trying to make a point like
that. I don’t know if it ever really got there. It’s a lot of arguing and then,
once the fun starts, it’s over way too fast. And we never see the wife nekkid.
But it has its enjoyable moments. If you’d never heard of Children of the Corn
or at least never seen any of the movies, you might even like it. Ultimately, what
makes the Children of the Corn movies so popular, so much so that they’ve had
more sequels than any other Stephen King story, is just the drawing together of
so much Americana. This one has plenty of that, at least.