Clown in a Cornfield
★ ★ ★
Clown in a Cornfield is a more competent horror film than its goofy title suggests. The trailer hinted at a familiar but promising premise — and for the most part, the film delivers. While it doesn’t push many boundaries, it manages to rise above the clichés with blood-soaked flair.
Teenager Quinn (Katie Douglas) and her dad, Dr. Maybrook (Aaron Abrams), have just moved to fictional Kettle Springs, Mo. from Philadelphia. Maybrook has bought a house sight-unseen, and Quinn bemoans the idea of living in the landlocked Midwest.

Aaron Adams and Katie Douglas
© 2025 RLJE Films / Shudder
Quinn makes quick friends with a high school clique: Cole (Carson MacCormac), Janet (Cassandra Potenza), Ronnie (Verity Marks), Tucker (Ayo Solanke) and Matt (Alexandre Martin Deakin). Within a couple days, the entire clique will go from after school detention to a few hours in the town slammer.
The group has been making their own horror films centered on the town mascot, a clown named Frendo. Their films are fairly short and have built a modest-but-growing YouTube following. Frendo is the face of the town’s major export – corn syrup. As you might guess, being in Missouri, there’s no shortage of cornfields in Kettle Springs.

Watch out for Frendo
© 2025 RLJE Films / Shudder
The film flirts with themes of generational resentment and small-town decay, but doesn’t dig deep. A richer story lurks beneath the surface — one that could have explored how nostalgia, economic stagnation and youth rebellion shape Kettle Springs. There’s a town conspiracy in play, but it’s more a background noise than a compelling engine. Instead, the focus shifts to increasingly elaborate kills that gradually lose impact, sacrificing insight for spectacle.

Verity Marks, Cassandra Potenza and Carson MacCormac
© 2025 RLJE Films / Shudder
Clown in a Cornfield owes a debt to Scream and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre — films that used horror to dissect cultural anxieties. This one borrows their masks and machetes, but glosses over the deeper commentary. It briefly nods at digital-age disconnection, then promptly glosses over it in favor of blood and gore. The story highlights generation gaps and puts our teens in jeopardy when they don’t know how to use a rotary phone or drive a stick.
If nothing else, Clown in a Cornfield stands as a stark warning: if the welcome sign smiles back, turn the car around.
Rated: R for bloody horror violence, language throughout and teen drinking.
Running Time: 1h 36m
Directed by: Eli Craig
Written by: Carter Blanchard, Eli Craig
Starring: Katie Douglas, Aaron Abrams, Carson MacCormac, Vincent Muller, Kevin Durand, Will Sasso, Verity Marks, Cassandra Potenza, Ayo Solanke, Diana Leitold
Horror, Mystery & Thriller