Children of the Corn 666: Isaac's Return
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Average customer review:Product Description
With riveting performances from stars John Franklin (CHILDREN OF THE CORN, ADDAMS FAMILY VALUES), Stacy Keach (AMERICAN HISTORY X), and Alix Koromzay (CARRIE II, THE HAUNTING, NIGHTWATCH), ISAAC'S RETURN is the sixth and newest bone-chilling chapter in the thrilling CHILDREN OF THE CORN series! On a trip to find her birth mother, Hannah Martin picks up a dark stranger who kicks off a mysterious chain of events. Little does Hannah know that her journey may help fulfill a sinister prophecy made 19 years earlier by Isaac, the cult's original evil leader! It's a hair-raising movie event you don't want to miss as Isaac makes his terrifying return and the frightening Children Of The Corn achieve their ultimate destiny!
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #32752 in DVD
- Released on: 1999-10-19
- Rating: R (Restricted)
- Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
- Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Letterboxed, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Subtitled in: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 82 minutes
Customer Reviews
Oh the humanity!
No other author in recent memory has had as much consistent success selling books as Stephen King. For roughly three decades the Maine writer churned out book after book, each one selling more and more copies. He's a world unto himself, the lucky fellow! He's so successful that he could throw out his pens, put away his typewriters, bury his word processor six feet under, never write another word in his life, and STILL have enough money to wallpaper the Great Wall of China five times over. In many respects, it's Stephen King's world and the rest of us are just living in it. But, and this is a gigantic but, an enormous number of metaphysically bad films based on his novels threaten to put a serious dent in his legacy. We all know the good ones, the ones that not only scared audiences stiff but also helped propel King's career to even greater heights. "Carrie" is probably the best example, followed by "The Shawshank Redemption" and "The Dead Zone." These are wonderful, magical films that one can watch again and again without wearying of them. Then there are the rest: the truly wretched refuse that reminds one of dental plaque or the junk that washes up on the shores of a filthy river. Welcome to the Children of the Corn franchise.
"Children of the Corn 666: Isaac's Return" introduces us to Hannah (Natalie Ramsey), a young lady heading back to the now infamous Gatlin, Nebraska in order to answer some important personal questions: why am I drawn to a town out in the sticks? Who is my mother and where is she? Will accepting this role in a schlock, straight to video clunker enhance my career opportunities? You can quickly grasp the metaphysical importance of such ponderings. In quick succession, Hannah runs into a string of problems. Pushy town cop Cora (Alix Koromzay) gives her sass before she even arrives in town. Doc Michaels (Stacy Keach), the town quack, insists on imprinting his own weird impressions on the girl. But the most bizarre occurrence confronting Hannah during her first visit to Gatlin is the sight of a short man hooked up to a slew of machines in a hospital. This figure is none other than Isaac (John Franklin), the original apostle of "He Who Walks Behind the Rows" in the first film. Apparently, the boyish preacher did not perish at the end of "Children of the Corn," although it sure looked like it then, but slipped into a deep coma that has rendered him helpless for all these years. The arrival of Hannah, however, fulfills an old prophecy that will see Isaac out of his coma and possibly bring about a reemergence of the corn demon.
As "Children of the Corn 666" progresses, not so much in a linear manner but in a serious of jerky fits and starts capable of inducing whiplash in the viewer, more of the "storyline" emerges for our consumption. It appears that many worshippers of "He Who Walks Behind the Rows" survived the Peter Horton induced apocalypse at the end of the first film and grew up. They've been waiting all these years--raising their own children and acting like responsible adults--for Isaac to awaken from his slumber and call forth the demon. Why? I don't know. Since cult members always considered anyone over the age of eighteen the enemy, I can't imagine why grown people would welcome the malevolent corn god with open arms. Wouldn't he just pop up out of the earth and rip every person with age wrinkles and five o'clock shadow into bloody pulp? The whole subplot involving Hannah's reunion with her mother Rachel (Nancy Allen) withers when confronted with fundamental questions the movie refuses to ask, let alone answer. It should go without saying that numerous individuals find the idea of a possible Isaac/corn devil reconciliation an unpalatable situation. These are the people who end up on the wrong end of scythes and other sharp objects.
What we have here is such a mess of a film that it easily ranks as the worst entry in the franchise. So many characters parade past the screen, from Gabriel (Paul Popowich) to Jake (William Prael) to a dozen others that it's impossible to keep it all straight. Only the presence of the attractive Natalie Ramsey and the very gorgeous Sydney Bennet in the role of cranky Morgan help keep this film down on stomachs made queasy with banalities. John Franklin, who also co-wrote the script, doesn't do much beyond what he did in the first film. Sure, he issues the usual biblical mumbo jumbo pronouncements to adoring audiences, but his middle age mug and rougher voice tell us this isn't the Isaac we remember from the first film. Is it possible for the chief apostle of a demon to collect Social Security checks, particularly when said demon makes it a point to hype the virtues of youth? Like I wrote earlier, there are more questions here than answers. By the time the film shudders to a halt, all I could bring myself to praise was the gore, and there is precious little of that floating around compared to other entries in the series.
The DVD contains no extras, which is just as well because that would require the viewer to spend more time with this no account film. I suggest you skip, forget, overlook, reject, condemn, avoid, cast off, jettison, exile, dump, burn, pass over, disregard, denounce, discard, and abandon "Children of the Corn 666" as quickly as possible. Rearrange your sock drawer, change the furnace filters in your house, or reattach those plastic thingies to your shoelaces--do anything you can think of to avoid this atrocity. If you must see it, good luck and may god be with you.
the best sequel! John Franklin does it again!
this one should be the 2nd COTC.they shouldve wiped off the other 4 becuz the 1st and this one are both classics! This one is about a girl named hannah in search for her birth mother in Gatlin. she is stopped and taken to the hospital and sees isaac (john franklin) in a 19 yr coma. however her touch woke him up and hes back to spread the wwisdom of He Who Walks Behind The Rows.but while hannah is looking for her mom she doesnt realize she is making a prophecy come true.If youve seen the other COTC but not this 1 SEE IT! Not to give it away but it shows H.W.W.B.T.R! This movie includes blood and a few curses. it shows hannah fooling around but it doesn't show nudity just her kissing with a guy she fell in love with (his name is Gabriel) however there were r a few parts i didnt get like the begining it shows someone walking and then someone falls down half dead and in the 2nd COTC one boy said Isaac was dead not in a coma.? i dunno but i must say this a great sequel with excellent acting from everyone. especaill Isaac(john franklin)Hannah(Nataile Ramsey) and Gabriel (? ). So get some popcorn sit back oh and leave the lite on!
Children of the Cornball
One must pity poor John Franklin. Having failed to find his niche in motion pictures, he (in apparent desperation) returns to COTC as Isaac, who awakens from a 19-year-long coma. It is also apparent that the years have not been kind to John; though he still has the stature of a child, his visage is is that of a middle-aged man. It is also clearly evident that his acting skills have not grown either, as he awkwardly spews out some of the silliest dialogue ever concocted for the screen. However, even a skilled actor would find it nearly impossible to do much with a script as dreadful as this. The greatest mystery here is how a talented actor like Stacy Keach could have allowed himself to become involved in a project as lousy as this one. However, his character (a drunken physician) is mercifully killed off fairly early; after watching this junk, many viewers will find themselves strongly tempted to start drinking, as well. The rest of the supporting cast are a sorry lot, with the lack of talent glaringly evident at every turn. In short, this is one of those third-rate direct-to-video ...fests which the good people in Hollywood crank out in an effort to milk an established formula for a few more bucks, with no regard for quality.
As a horror film, this one is a dismal failure; however for those who enjoy "bad" movies, this is a classic. Ed Wood may be long gone, but this film proves that his spirit is still around. This film is so cheap and cheesy that it evokes memories of the glory days of Poverty Row, a pure Grade-Z bomb. The most frightening thing about this film is that anyone wasted the time and (very little) money to make it.




