Screams & Streams

Ep. 131: Guy Magar's "Children of the Corn: Revelation" (2001)

47 min · 23. maj 2026
episode Ep. 131: Guy Magar's "Children of the Corn: Revelation" (2001) cover

Description

A horror sequel can be messy, cheap, and even ridiculous and still be a good time. Children of the Corn: Revelation somehow misses that entire lane, and we felt every minute of its 82-minute runtime. We’re Sam, Mike, and Chad, and we’re breaking down the seventh entry in the Children of the Corn franchise, a Stephen King spinoff that sits at a brutal 0% on Rotten Tomatoes. We start with a quick plot setup: Jamie heads to Omaha to check on her grandmother, finds a condemned apartment building, and gets pulled into a swarm of possessed children and half-explained religious horror. From there, we go category by category: first impressions, our Tropes Hall of Shame, and the “don’t go back in the house” decisions that could have saved Jamie and definitely could have saved us. We also get into the craft failures that make this one such a slog, including the slow pacing, bargain-basement sets, shaky acting, and sound design that cranks generic music stings to eleven. Then we hit the fun parts: the weird one-liners, the most gratuitous scenes, what actually made us laugh out loud, and the biggest “what the hell was that?” moments, including plot holes we can’t stop poking. We wrap by comparing it to better evil-kids horror, share a few bonus facts (including budget and franchise trivia), and lock in our watchability score. If you like horror movie reviews, Rotten Tomatoes worst-of lists, and unfiltered sequel autopsies, subscribe for more, share the episode with a friend who loves bad horror, and leave a rating or review so more listeners can find the show.  Head to www.screamsandstreams.com [http://www.screamsandstreams.com] for more information related to our episode.

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138 episodes

episode Ep. 135: Rick Bota's Hellraiser: Hellseeker (2002) artwork

Ep. 135: Rick Bota's Hellraiser: Hellseeker (2002)

0% on Rotten Tomatoes is rare, but after watching Hellraiser: Hellseeker (2002), we get it. We go scene by scene through a sequel that drowns in non-linear edits, “gotcha” hallucinations, and a plot that keeps resetting right when it might finally build momentum. The result is less supernatural horror and more confused limbo, where sex, murder, and flashbacks pile up without earning dread or clarity. We also talk franchise expectations: what makes Hellraiser and Pinhead iconic in the first place, why the puzzle box mythology needs rules, and how this movie sidelines the very things fans show up for. If you’ve ever wondered how a horror sequel can feel like it was stitched together from a different script, our breakdown of the tone, performances, and missing Cenobites makes the case. Along the way, we hit our categories, including the Sinister Sip cocktail called “Hellraiser,” a Tropes Hall of Shame run through the usual suspects, and a long list of what truly doesn’t hold up, from awkward effects to the baffling crash setup. In our bonus research, we get into the direct-to-video reality, the low budget, and the wild stat that Pinhead is on screen for under five minutes. We wrap with our watchability score, plus a few comparisons to movies that handle twists, punishment, and psychological horror far better. If you like spoiler-heavy horror movie podcast reviews, deep dives into bad sequels, and honest takes on franchise fatigue, hit play, then subscribe, share the show, and leave us a review wherever you listen.  Head to www.screamsandstreams.com [http://www.screamsandstreams.com] for more information related to our episode.

Yesterday50 min
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Ep. 134: Neil Marshall's "Dog Soldiers" (2002)

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episode Ep. 132: Victor Salva's "Jeepers Creepers" (2001) artwork

Ep. 132: Victor Salva's "Jeepers Creepers" (2001)

A monster on an empty highway, a dirty secret in a church basement, and two siblings who cannot stop arguing long enough to make a smart decision. We go back to Victor Salva’s 2001 horror hit Jeepers Creepers and find out what happens when a movie you remember as “so creepy” meets a modern rewatch and a very low patience for bad choices. We talk through the full plot with spoilers, then put the movie on trial using our favorite categories: first impressions, the Tropes Hall of Shame, “don’t go back in the house,” one-liners, what doesn’t hold up, most gratuitous moments, what made us laugh, and whether anything actually stood the test of time. Along the way we get into Justin Long’s early performance, the effects that now look downright wobbly, the logic gaps around the pipe, the psychic phone call that comes out of nowhere, and the way the Jeepers Creepers song gets used until it stops feeling scary. Of course, we also bring the fun. Mike serves up a Sinister Sip inspired by the movie, complete with an eyeball garnish, and we share the behind-the-scenes trivia that surprised us most, including box office numbers and some wild casting “what ifs.” Then we land the plane with our watchability scores and a blunt answer to the big question horror fans keep asking: is Jeepers Creepers worth watching today, or is it better left in the past? If you like spoiler-filled horror movie reviews, Rotten Tomatoes debates, and trope-spotting with jokes, hit play, then subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave us a rating and review.  Head to www.screamsandstreams.com [http://www.screamsandstreams.com] for more information related to our episode.

30. maj 202650 min
episode Ep. 131: Guy Magar's "Children of the Corn: Revelation" (2001) artwork

Ep. 131: Guy Magar's "Children of the Corn: Revelation" (2001)

A horror sequel can be messy, cheap, and even ridiculous and still be a good time. Children of the Corn: Revelation somehow misses that entire lane, and we felt every minute of its 82-minute runtime. We’re Sam, Mike, and Chad, and we’re breaking down the seventh entry in the Children of the Corn franchise, a Stephen King spinoff that sits at a brutal 0% on Rotten Tomatoes. We start with a quick plot setup: Jamie heads to Omaha to check on her grandmother, finds a condemned apartment building, and gets pulled into a swarm of possessed children and half-explained religious horror. From there, we go category by category: first impressions, our Tropes Hall of Shame, and the “don’t go back in the house” decisions that could have saved Jamie and definitely could have saved us. We also get into the craft failures that make this one such a slog, including the slow pacing, bargain-basement sets, shaky acting, and sound design that cranks generic music stings to eleven. Then we hit the fun parts: the weird one-liners, the most gratuitous scenes, what actually made us laugh out loud, and the biggest “what the hell was that?” moments, including plot holes we can’t stop poking. We wrap by comparing it to better evil-kids horror, share a few bonus facts (including budget and franchise trivia), and lock in our watchability score. If you like horror movie reviews, Rotten Tomatoes worst-of lists, and unfiltered sequel autopsies, subscribe for more, share the episode with a friend who loves bad horror, and leave a rating or review so more listeners can find the show.  Head to www.screamsandstreams.com [http://www.screamsandstreams.com] for more information related to our episode.

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