Now showing on DuranDuranTulsa's Horror Show...Children Of The Corn (1984) on glorious vintage VHS 📼! #movie #movies #horror #childrenofthecorn #stephenking #peterhorton #LindaHamilton #johnfranklin #CourtneyGains #rgarmstrong #robbykiger #annemariemcevoy #jonasmarlowe #johnphilbin #vintage #vhs #80s #durandurantulsa #durandurantulsashorrorshow
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March 2024 Escher Girls Update and Patreon Thank You!
Hi everybody!
It's a new month, so it's time for a site update and to thank our awesome Patreon subscribers!
First, I've restored more posts that were broken in the move from Tumblr due to being animated gifs or posts/users being deleted/leaving Tumblr before the export, etc... I also reformat all the posts to be easier to read and add image descriptions to all the images. This month, one of the posts I restored was this great breakdown and redraw by LessTitsNAss of the Superman vol. 3 #9 cover featuring Anguish/Masochist punching Superman while in a boobs and butt pose. At the time the preview of the cover came out, the character was named Masochist, but I believe she was renamed to Anguish when the comic was actually published, hence why some of the posts still refer to her as Masochist. I put a combined image of the redraw and breakdown as the image for this post, but if you want to see larger versions of each part, go check out the post!
And I'm continuing to work my way through the Tumblr inbox backlog so old submissions might be showing up. Due to the way Tumblr piles up everything in descending order of newest first, a lot of the older stuff got buried since I get a lot of submissions, and it takes a while for me to get to it. I'm really sorry if it's taken this long for your submission to show up.
I've also been continuing to appeal mistakenly flagged posts by Tumblr's algorithm which can't tell the difference between stuff like a solid coloured body suit and actual nudity (it flagged Johnny Storm as being naked, for instance because he was on fire). The algorithmic flagging, sudden rule changes, and other controversies, are the reason I host Escher Girls independently as well as cross-posting on Tumblr because then there's an archive of the posts that aren't affected by posts being flagged or removed on Tumblr or if Tumblr goes down or something.
And it's also why I really appreciate everybody who supposed us on Patreon and Ko-Fi. <3 It helps me pay for server costs, upgrades, domain hosting, and other things that help to keep the site going. :)
So I want to thank everybody who supported Escher Girls on Patreon in February!
Thank you so so much to:
Anne Adler
Cat Mara
CheerfulOptimistic
Chris McKenzie
Em Bardon
First Time Trek
Greg Sepelak
Ian Cameron
Ken Trosaurus
Kevin Carson
Kim Wincen
Kristoffer Illern Holmén
Leak
Manuel Dalton
Mary Kuhner
Max Schwarz
Michael Mazur
Miriam Pody
Morgan McEvoy
randomisedmongoose
Rebecca Breu
Ringoko
Ryan Gerber
Sam Mikes
Sean Sea
SpecialRandomCast
Thomas
And a special thank you to PJ Evans for donating on Ko-Fi!!! I really appreciate it. :)
Also a huge thank you to everybody for reading, submitting, and generally commenting and engaging with Escher Girls! It makes running the site so worth it. :)
For those who want to follow us without using Tumblr, we have an RSS feed. (For newbies, RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication and is basically a feed you can read using an RSS reader. Simply copy and paste https://eschergirls.com/rss.xml into an RSS reader and it will keep you up to date on Escher Girls!)
Thank you all so much,
Ami
If you have any issues with the site or suggestions to improve it, please do not hesitate to contact me and let me know!
If you wish to support Escher Girls, you can subscribe to our Patreon at: https://www.patreon.com/ami_angelwings or donate through Ko-Fi at: https://ko-fi.com/amiangelwings.
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looking up the ages of the actors in the film is interesting though. it’s a little like finding out that lesley mackie, who played daisy in the wicker man (the girl who does the “poor old beetle” thing) was 22– you never contemplate those things when you watch it. or i don’t
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Children of the Corn turns on Yesterday's Movies
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CHILDREN OF THE CORN (1984) – Episode 187 – Decades of Horror 1980s
"Do it now, or your punishment shall be a thousand deaths, each more horrible than the last!" Seems like once would be enough. Join your faithful Grue-Crew - Crystal Cleveland, Chad Hunt, Bill Mulligan, and Jeff Mohr - as they walk behind the rows in search of “He Who” in Stephen King’s Children of the Corn (1984).
Decades of Horror 1980s
Episode 187 – Children of the Corn (1984)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel!
Subscribe today! And click the alert to get notified of new content!
https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
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.
IMDb
Director: Fritz Kiersch
Writers: George Goldsmith (screenplay); Stephen King (based on the short story by)
Cast
Adults
Peter Horton as Burt Stanton
Linda Hamilton as Vicky Baxter
R. G. Armstrong as Diehl ("The Old Man")
Children
John Franklin as Isaac Chroner
Courtney Gains as Malachai Boardman
Robby Kiger as Job
Anne Marie McEvoy as Sarah
Julie Maddalena as Rachel Colby
Jonas Marlowe as Joseph
John Philbin as Richard 'Amos' Deigan
Jeff picked Children of the Corn thinking he might have missed something in his original viewing, which was not favorable. He is, however, disappointed to find his assessment hasn’t changed. He calls Isaac (John Franklin) and Malachi (Courtney Gains) the best things about the film but laments the filmmakers didn’t stick with the original script or something closer to King’s short story. Crystal saw Children of the Corn when she was a little kid, probably too little she admits, and she loved the idea of kids ruling the world. She still loves the film but goes so far as to say it does suffer a bit now. Hating it then and still not thinking too much of it, Chad felt cheated by the ending. He did find the character of Isaac mesmerizing but he still doesn’t understand why Children of the Corn is sometimes referred to as a classic. Bill loves King’s original story and is irritated with the film when almost immediately he realizes it doesn’t follow the story’s plot. He likes the film's title, the poster, and the great folk horror mythology of “He Who Walks Behind The Rows,” but, in his view, the filmmakers made too many bad choices.
If you are so inclined, Children of the Corn is currently available for streaming on Hulu and Amazon Prime and on physical media as a Special Edition Blu-ray from Arrow Video.
Every two weeks, Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror 1980s podcast will cover another horror film from the 1980s. The next episode’s film, chosen by Bill, will be The Pit (1981).. You won’t want to miss that one!
Please let them know how they’re doing! They want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans: leave them a message or leave a comment on the gruesome Magazine Youtube channel, on the website or email the Decades of Horror 1980s podcast hosts at
[email protected]
Check out this episode!
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Children of the Corn will be released as Steelbook Blu-ray/DVD combo pack on June 4 via RLJ Entertainment. The 1984 horror film is based on Stephen King’s 1977 short story of the same name, published in Night Shift.
Peter Horton and Linda Hamilton star alongside John Franklin, Courtney Gains, Robby Kiger, Anne Marie McEvoy, Julie Maddalena, and R. G. Armstrong. Fritz Kiersch (Tuff Turf) directs.
Special features are not listed, but hopefully it will at least port over extras extras.
A young couple find themselves stranded in the rural town of Gatlin, Nebraska, where they encounter a mysterious religious sect of children. But nowhere in town are there any adults. The horror grows to a bloodcurdling climax as the two new visitors learn the horrifying secret behind the prospering cornfields.
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current reading list for 2019
crossed = finished
bolded = currently reading
plain = to read
CURRENTLY READING
Erotism: Death and Sensuality by Georges Bataille
Fleurs du Mal by Charles Baudelaire
Violence and the Sacred by René Girard
Selected Prose of Heinrich von Kleist
TO READ
to resume
The Horror Reader edited by Ken Gilder
The Collected Works of Clarice Lispector
Là-Bas by J.K. Huysman
On Touching by Jacques Derrida
Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection by Julia Kristeva
novels
The Border of Paradise by Esmé Weijun Wang
Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë (reread)
Justine by Lawrence Durrell
Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy
Death in Venice by Thomas Mann (reread)
I’m Starved For You by Margaret Atwood
The Robber Bride by Margaret Atwood
The Name of the Rose (reread) by Umberto Eco
The Letters of Mina Harker by Dodie Bellamy
Story of the Eye by Georges Bataille
Sunshine by Robin McKinley
Nightwood by Djuna Barnes
Malina by Ingeborg Bachman
The Lesser Bohemians by Eimear McBride
A Girl is a Half-Formed Thing by Eimear McBride
Enfermario by Gabriela Torres Olivares
Monsieur Venus by Rachilde
The Marquise de Sade by Rachilde
Hannibal
Hannibal Rising by Thomas Harris
Monsters of our own Making by Marina Warner
“Monsters of Perversion: Jeffrey Dahmer and The Silence of the Lambs” by Diana Fuss
short stories
The Wilds by Julia Elliot
The Dark Dark by Samantha Hunt
Severance by Robert Olen Butler
poetry
Extracting the Stone of Madness by Alejandra Pizarnik
The Complete Poems by William Blake
Unholy Sonnets by Mark Jarman
collected works of Charles Baudelaire
collected works of Arthur Rimbaud
theatre
Faust by Goethe
The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe
nonfiction (history, biography, memoir)
Love's executioner and other tales of psychotherapy / Irvin D. Yalom.
Countess Dracula by Tony Thorne
The Bloody Countess by Valentine Penrose
Infamous Lady: The True Story of Countess Erzsebet Bathory by Kimberly L. Craft
Cannibalism: A Perfectly Natural History by Bill Schmutt
Afterlives: The Return of the Dead in the Middles Ages by Nancy Caciola
Caliban and the Witch by Silvia Federici
Blake by Peter Akroyd
The Trial of Gilles de Rais by Georges Bataille
The Marquis de Sade by Rachilde
Blake by Peter Akroyd
Dinner with a Cannibal: The Complete History of Mankind's Oldest Taboo by Carole A. Travis-Henikoff
The Dragons of Eden by Carl Sagan
Emily Brontë by Agnes Mary Frances Robinson
Lives of the Necromancers by William Godwin
A History of the Heart by Ole M. Høystad
In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado
essays
When the Sick Rule the World by Dodie Bellamy
Academonia by Dodie Bellamy
The Body of Frankenstein's Monster by Cecil Helman
academia
Monsters of Our Own Making by Marina Warner
Monster Culture in the 21st Century: A Reader edited by by Marina Levina and Diem My Bui
Essays on the Art of Angela Carter: Flesh and the Mirror edited by Lorna Sage
The Routledge Companion to Literature and Food edited by Lorna Piatti-Farnell, Donna Lee Brien
the gothic
Woman and Demon: The Life of a Victorian Myth by Nina Auerbach
Skin Shows: Gothic Horror and the Technology of Monsters by J. Halberstam
Perils of the Night: A Feminist Study of Nineteenth-Century Gothic by Eugenia C. Delamotte
Art of Darkness: A Poetics of Gothic by Anne Williams
Body Gothic: Corporeal Transgression in Contemporary Literature and Horror Film by Xavier Aldana Reyes
On the Supernatural in Poetry by Ann Radcliffe
The Gothic Flame by Devendra P. Varma
Gothic Versus Romantic: A Reevaluation of the Gothic Novel by Robert D. Hume
A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful by Edmund Burke
Over Her Dead Body by Elisabeth Bronfen
The Contested Castle: Gothic Novels and the Subversion of Domestic Ideology by Kate Ellis
Gothic Documents: A Sourcebook, 1700-1820 by E. Clery
Limits of Horror: Technology, Bodies, Gothic edited by Fred Botting
The History of Gothic Fiction by Markman Ellis
The Routledge Companion to the Gothic edited by Catherine Spooner and Emma McEvoy
Gothic and Gender edited by Donna Heiland
Romanticism and the Gothic Tradition by G.R. Thompson
Cryptomimesis : The Gothic and Jacques Derrida's Ghost Writing by Jodie Castricano
religion
The Incorruptible Flesh: Bodily Mutation and Mortification in Religion and Folklore by Piero Camporesi
Discerning Spirits: Divine and Demonic Possession in the Middle Ages by Nancy Caciola
“He Has a God in Him”: Human and Divine in the Modern Perception of Dionysus by Albert Henrichs
The Ordinary Business of Occultism by Gauri Viswanathan
The Body and Society. Men, Women, and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity by Peter Brown
cannibalism
Eat What You Kill: Or, a Strange and Gothic Tale of Cannibalism by Consent Eat What You Kill: Or, a Strange and Gothic Tale of Cannibalism by Consent Charles J. Reid Jr.
Consuming Passions: The Uses of Cannibalism in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe by Merrall Llewelyn Price
Cannibalism in High Medieval English Literature by Heather Blurton
Eating Their Words: Cannibalism and the Boundaries of Cultural Identity edited by Kristen Guest
crime
Savage Appetites by Rachel Monroe
In Cold Blood by Truman Capote
theory/philosophy
Life Everlasting: the animal way of death by Bernd Heinrich
The Ambivalence of Scarcity and Other Essays by René Girard
Interviews with Hélène Cixous
Symposium by Plato
Phaedra by Plato
Becoming-Rhythm: A Rhizomatics of the Girl by Leisha Jones
The Abject of Desire: The Aestheticization of the Unaesthetic in Contemporary Literature and Culture edited by Konstanze Kutzbach, Monika Mueller
The Severed Head: Capital Visions by Julia Kristeva
perfume & alchemy
Perfume: The Alchemy of Scent by Jean-Claude Ellena
The Perfume Lover: A Personal Story of Scent by Denyse Beaulieu
Past Scents: Historical Perspectives on Smell by Jonathan Reinarz
Fragrant: The Secret Life of Scent by Mandy Aftel
Das Parfum by Patrick Süskind
Scents and Sensibility: Perfume in Victorian Literary Culture by Catherine Maxwell
“The Ugly History of Beautiful Things: Perfume”
medicine
Blood and Guts: A History of Surgery by Richard Hollingham
Better: A Surgeon’s Notes on Performance by Atul Gawande
Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End by Atul Gawande
The Butchering Art by Lindsey Fitzharris
articles
“The Dread Gorgon” by Caroline Alexander
“Ruggiero’s Deceptions, Cherubino’s Distractions” by Mary Reynolds
“A Thing of Shreds and Patches” by J’Lyn Chapman
“Dissection” by Meehan Crist
unsorted
Dwellings of the Philosophers by Fulcanelli
Mysteries of the Cathedrals by Fulcanelli
Jean Cocteau, from ‘Orphée’
The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio*
FINISHED
Red Dragon by Thomas Harris
The Silence of the Lambs by Thomas Harris
Hannibal by Thomas Harris
Fever Dream by Samanta Schweblin
White is for Witching by Helen Oyeyemi (reread)
Things We Lost in the Fire by Mariana Enríquez (reread)
Painting Their Portraits in Winter: Stories by Myriam Gurba
The Sadeian Woman by Angela Carter
the collected poems of Emily Brontë
Fearful Symmetry by Northrop Frye
A Monster’s Notes by Laurie Sheck
Cain by José Saramago
House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski (reread)
Such Small Hands by Andres Barba
House of Incest by Anaïs Nin
Macbeth by William Shakespeare
Hannibal Lecter and Philosophy: The Heart of the Matter edited by Joseph Westfall
The Body: An Essay by Jenny Boully
A Lover’s Discourse: Fragments by Roland Barthes
Carmilla by Sheridan le Fanu
Cabinet of Curiosities by Guillermo del Toro
John Donne’s Holy Sonnets
Surfacing by Margaret Atwood
Literature and Evil by Georges Bataille
Mr. Fox by Helen Oyeyemi
Richard III by William Shakespeare
The Dead Seagull by George barker
Power Politics by Margaret Atwood
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Now showing on my 80's Fest Movie 🎥 marathon...Children Of The Corn (1984) on glorious vintage VHS 📼! #movie #movies #horror #childrenofthecorn #stephenking #PeterHorton #LindaHamilton #rgarmstrong #CourtneyGains #johnfranklin #annemariemcevoy #robbykiger #jonasmarlowe #vintage #vhs #80s #80sfest #durandurantulsas5thannual80sfest
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Happy New Year everybody!
It's now January so it's time for a monthly update and to thank all our wonderful Patreon subscribers. :3 Since it's a new year, rather than thank only the Patreon subscribers for December, I'm going to thank anybody who subscribed in 2023 including those who donated on Ko-Fi. :)
For the update, this month I was fixing up the Jade Warriors and Psylocke tag, specifically, this Psylocke post from the early days of EG where she's technically fighting ninjas, and three of the most infamous Jade Warriors posts: the "rain" post, the "drying off" post, and the "females" post. The "drying off" and "females" posts also have two of the best redraw/re-scripts submitted to this blog, which I also restored and wanted to share with everybody because they're really great. The "drying off" redraw was done by @ghostgreen, and the "females" redraw was done by Eliza. I included both and the originals in this post because I think people who haven't seen them before might be interested to. :)
I mentioned this last month, but if you use Disqus, you should have noticed that the reactions have been changed to be less generic, and I've included a "thanks, I hate it!" option because it was requested.
Anyway, now I want to get to thanking everybody who helped support Escher Girls in 2023, whether through Patreon or Ko-Fi. :)
I know it's repetitive, but it's true, I really appreciate your support so much. because without it I wouldn't be able to keep the site independently hosted, unaffected by Tumblr's ever-changing policies and automated flagging system. We're also better able to make upgrades and maintain the site and fix stuff when it breaks, like fixing the submission form last month. And it just means a lot to me to know that people think Escher Girls is a project worth supporting and keeping online as an archive. :)
So, thank you so much to the following people for your support in 2023:
Anne Adler
Cat Mara
CheerfulOptimistic
Chris McKenzie
Em Bardon
First Time Trek
Greg Sepelak
Ian Cameron
JohnnyBob8
Ken Trosaurus
Kevin Carson
Kim Wincen
Kristoffer Illern Holmén
Leak
Manuel Dalton
Mary Kuhner
Max Schwarz
Michael Mazur
Michael Norton
Miriam Pody
Morgan McEvoy
mors_d
NM
randomisedmongoose
Rebecca Breu
Ringoko
Ryan Gerber
Sam Mikes
Sean Sea
SnigePippi
SpecialRandomCast
Thomas
Thomas Key
And I want to give a general thank you to everybody for reading, submitting, and engaging with Escher Girls. It makes running the site so worth it. I love checking your comments. :)
Thank you all so much,
Ami
If you have any issues with the site or suggestions to improve it, please do not hesitate to contact me and let me know!
For those who want to follow us without using Tumblr, we have an RSS feed. (For newbies, RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication and is basically a feed you can read using an RSS reader. Simply copy and paste https://eschergirls.com/rss.xml into an RSS reader and it will keep you up to date on Escher Girls!)
If you wish to support Escher Girls, you can subscribe to our Patreon at: https://www.patreon.com/ami_angelwings or donate through Ko-Fi at: https://ko-fi.com/amiangelwings.
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books read July 1 - December 31
ital for fun; bold ital for school/research
1. The Secret Art of Dr. Seuss
2. I Never Told Anybody: Teaching Poetry Writing in a Nursing Home by Kenneth Koch
3. Incarceration Nation: Investigative Prison Poems of Hope and Terror by Stephen John Hartnett
4. Split by Cathy Linh Che
5. Learning in Adulthood: A Comprehensive Guide by Sharan Merriam, Rosemary Caffarella, & Lisa Baumgartner
6. Pedagogy of Freedom: Ethics, Democracy, and Civic Courage by Paulo Freire
7. The Bees by Carol Ann Duffy
8. Blood Will Tell: A Medical Explanation of the Tyranny of Henry VIII by Kyra Cornelius Kramer
9. Lady Katherine Knollys: The Unacknowledged Daughter of King Henry VIII by Sarah-Beth Watkins
10. Catherine: The Great Journey by Kristiana Gregory
11. Marie Antoinette: Princess of Versailles by Kathryn Lasky
12. Eleanor: Crown Jewel of Aquitaine by Kristiana Gregory
13. The Reader, the Text, the Poem: The Transactional Theory of Literary Work by Louise M. Rosenblatt
14. Wild Wisdom: Animal Stories of the Southwest by Rae Ann Kumelos & Jan Taylor
15. Jahanara: Princess of Princesses by Kathryn Lasky
16. The Truth About Stories: A Native Narrative by Thomas King
17. Mary, Queen of Scots: Queen without a Country by Kathryn Lasky
18. Tantivy by Donald Revell
19. Literature as Exploration by Louise M. Rosenblatt
20. Kazunomiya: Prisoner of Heaven by Kathryn Lasky
21. Nzingha: Warrior Queen of Matamba by Patricia McKissack
22. Young and Damned and Fair: The Life of Catherine Howard, Fifth Wife of King Henry VIII by Gareth Russell
23. Composing a Culture: Inside a Summer Writing Program with High School Teachers by Bonnie Sunstein
24. Red Butterfly by A. L. Sonnichsen
25. Participant Observation by James P. Spradley
26. Kaiulani: The People’s Princess by Ellen Emerson White
27. Victoria: May Blossom of Britannia by Anna Kirwan
28. Ask Me: 100 Essential poems by William Stafford (ed. by Kim Stafford)
29. The Daily Spark: Spelling and Grammar
30. The Half Child by Kathleen Hersom
31. The Waters and the Wild by Francesca Lia Block
32. Elisabeth: The Princess Bride by Barry Denenberg
33. Weetamoo: Heart of the Pocassets by Patricia Clark Smith
34. Anacaona: Golden Flower by Edwidge Danticat
35. Isabel: Jewel of Castilla by Carolyn Meyer
36. Kristina: The Girl King by Carolyn Meyer
37. Lady of Palenque: Flower of Bacal by Anna Kirwan
38. Sad Birds Still Sing by faraway
39. Lady of Ch’iao Kuo: Warrior of the South by Laurence Yep
40. Cleopatra VII: Daughter of the Nile by Kristiana Gregory
41. Anastasia: The Last Grand Duchess by Carolyn Meyer
42. Elizabeth I: Red Rose of the House of Tudor by Kathryn Lasky
43. Prometheus Bound by Aeschylus, translated by George Thomson
44. The Epic of Gilgamesh translated by N.K. Sandars
45. Collected Poems by Louise Bogan
46. Guests by Teresa Cader
47. Qualitative Research: Analyzing Life by Johnny Saldana & Matt Omasta
48. Carpe Demon by Julie Kenner
49. Dealing with Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede
50. And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie
51. 10,000 Years of Art published by Phaidon
52. Pygmalion by Bernard Shaw
53. A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry
54. California Demon by Julie Kenner
55. Demons Are Forever by Julie Kenner
56. Searching for Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede
57. Calling on Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede
58. Crooked House by Agatha Christie
59. Talking to Dragons (revised) by Patricia C. Wrede
60. Talking to Dragons (original) by Patricia C. Wrede
61. Book of Enchantments by Patricia C. Wrede
62. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll
63. Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll
64. Case Study Research: Design and Methods by Robert K. Yin
65. A Fair Wind for Troy by Doris Gates
66. Narrative Inquiry: Experience and Story in Qualitative Research by D. Jean Clandinin & F. Michael Connelly
67. The Literature Review: Six Steps to Success by Lawrence A. Machi & Brenda T. McEvoy
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293 #Inktober Day 20 Sprout Children of the Corn (advertised as Stephen King's Children of the Corn) is a 1984 American supernatural folk horror film based upon 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 McEvoy, Julie Maddalena, and R. G. Armstrong. Set in the fictitious rural town of Gatlin, Nebraska, the film tells the story of a malevolent entity referred to as "He Who Walks Behind the Rows" which entices the town's children to ritually murder all the town's adults, and a couple driving across the country, to ensure a successful corn harvest. #Inktober2021 #ChildrenoftheCorn #art #artwork #artistofinstagram #artist #artistforhire #Custom #create #drawing #drawingaday #draweveryday #illustration #pencil #sketch https://www.instagram.com/p/CVRrKV3r2Kc/?utm_medium=tumblr
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