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Remembering Corey Haim

By Christopher Campbell | Posted Under Blog Trends | Comments (14)



lucas023.jpg

I have always cherished Lucas more than any John Hughes film dealing with the high school caste system. For me it falls just below Heathers in that regard, which is fitting since both featured Winona Ryder. But like in the choir scene from Lucas, nobody’s looking at Ryder today. We’re all looking at the film’s star, Corey Haim.

Anyone who had interests outside the norm of high school students, anyone who ever wanted to fit in at least at some point as a teenager, anyone who ever had a crush on an older, inaccessible schoolmate had to have appreciated Lucas. As has been pointed out a few places today, it was a more genuine precursor to Rushmore, which comparatively lacks charm.

If Lucas wasn’t your bag, though, you at least had to have thoughts of Haim in License to Drive when it was your time to be introduced to the frightening world of the DMV. Or related to Haim the first moment you realized your older brother was off getting into no good, whether with alcohol or vampires or whatever.

With a few years on me, Haim was an actor who helped guide me into adolescence and teenage-dom with a sense that it would be okay. I’d like to thank him and all his characters for that.

Rest in peace, Leukoplakia!

  • Mandi Bierly at EW’s PopWatch:
    We can’t pretend that we’ve all followed his career in recent years, but when someone touches your life when you’re young — as Haim did with Lucas, which taught us that the strongest kids in school are the ones who walk down that hallway knowing they’ll be teased — you’ll always have a fondness for them.
  • Whitney Matheson at PopCandy:
    As someone who watched The Lost Boys, Lucas, License to Drive, Dream a Little Dream and other Corey flicks countless times growing up, I feel like I’ve lost (another) piece of my childhood. No matter what shape he was in, I was always crossing my fingers for a Corey comeback.
  • Mark Graham at Best Week Ever:
    While it initially looked as if Haim could carve out a niche for himself as a lovable geek in the Anthony Michael Hall vein, he promptly did a 180 and turned himself into a veritable teen dream love machine with roles in The Lost Boys and License To Drive. His successes paved the way for cocksure teens like Kirk Cameron (a fellow Canadian!) and Mark-Paul Gosselaar to gain a foothold in pop culture, but sadly, the fame went to his head and he got himself caught up in the excesses of the decade, snorting his way out of the rolodexes of everyone in Hollywood by the year 1990.
  • Scott Weinberg at Cinematical:
    His was always a welcome face on the movie screen as I was growing up. He was funny and goofy and endearing. And then he vanished, partially because of drug problems, and probably (in large part) because he wasn’t all that great of an actor. But you know what? He was a “bankable” little star for a few good years, but (as it often happens) Hollywood just spit the guy out and he became a C-list tabloid joke. Mostly because of his own doing, absolutely … but it’s still a sad story any way you slice it.
  • Gabe Delahaye at Videogum:
    When I went to YouTube to find a charming Corey Haim clip to post in thoughtful remembrance of his life and his work, it is all laughing stock videos. LIke this. He just seems like one of the purest examples of Hollywood’s gnashing, dissatisfied maw, eagerly rendering human lives into messy, broken piles of cocaine-soaked pulp. Then again, he’s not actually in a better place, because the better place to be is still alive, working things out. And besides, there were good times, even if they now seem in the distant past. So this is just sad. Duh.
  • Rob Hunter at Film School Rejects:
    Lucas is one of my favorite underdog sports movies because it stays honest with itself and its audience right through to the end, and Haim is the epitome of awkward likability. Silver Bullet is a goofy as hell werewolf movie featuring a wheelchair-bound Haim fighting off the menacing lycanthrope with the help of illegal fireworks and the always nutty Gary Busey. Watchers absolutely mangles the beautiful and exciting Dean Koontz book it’s based on, but Haim somehow salvages it with pure charm and personality. Blown Away is a guilty pleasure from frame one, and is most notable (and worth watching) for a fantastic, against the wall sex scene with Nicole Eggert’s body double.
  • Mike Bracken at Horror Squad:
    Let’s instead remember Corey for the good things he brought us. Haim didn’t do a lot of horror films, but the ones he did appear in were memorable. He turned up in the cinematic adaptation of Stephen King’s story Silver Bullet and in Dean Koontz’s killer monster flick Watchers.

    However, Haim will always be best known as Sam, the teenaged vampire killer in Joel Schumacher’s classic The Lost Boys. That role encapsulated everything we loved about Corey Haim—his sense of humor, his charm, and yes, even his acting ability. Corey may not have come to the end we’d all have hoped, but his legacy lives on in the work he leaves behind.

  • Josh Wigler at MTV Movies Blog:
    The best of Haim’s horror movie work — indeed, the best of Haim’s collaborations with Feldman — is undoubtedly in the form of “The Lost Boys,” the vampire thriller starring Jason Patric and Kiefer Sutherland. Haim’s hilariously obnoxious Sam Emerson is perfectly matched against his monstrous do-gooder of a brother, the brothers Frog and the many vampires contained within the film. When it comes to marrying swagger and horror, this was Haim’s role to beat.
  • Catherine Shoard at The Guardian Film Blog:
    Joel Schumacher’s cult classic was, though not his strongest, certainly Haim’s definitive role, not least because it marked the beginning of his partnership with Corey Feldman: another child star, with whom he starred no fewer than 10 films and, later, a reality TV show. Here we see him at his sudsy, youthful best, singing in the bath, blissfully unaware of his brother’s troubles. It’s a charming, carefree snapshot of young teenage life; part Fred Savage, part Macaulay Culkin.
  • Meredith Woerner at io9:
    We lost our minds when Haim showed up with a long yellow mullet in Crank 2, and really hoped this could be the reawakening Haim’s career, now that he was able to laugh at himself. Even co-star Amy Smart was rooting for him.
  • Craig Kennedy at Living in Cinema:
    Though I didn’t follow his career, his troubled and now shortened journey through adulthood was hard not to be aware of. I think of people like Haim sometimes when I look at the latest child/teen stars and I wonder which ones will live through it unscathed.
  • Karina Longworth at Style Council:
    This sad news comes just days after the Oscars, where a not-quite-intentional highlight was the strange mirror-phase collision that occurred, thanks to the tribute to the late John Hughes, between two generations of teen stars: the aged Brat Pack, and the current stars of High School Musical and Twilight. It’s easy to joke about what Judd Nelson looks like in his 40s, and it’s maybe even easier to joke about what Zac Efron will look like in his 40s (see: the casting of Matthew Perry’s in 17 Again). But, um, whoops—a significant number of teen stars never make it to 40 at all.








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Comments

Growing up my best friend and I were all about the Coreys, she prefered Haim and I Feldman. Then a couple years back we got the opportunity to go and see Feldman's band play for the A&E show, while waitiing for the show to start I looked over and saw Haim standing right next to me. I said "Hey, you're Corey Haim" it was pretty cool, and I actually found Haim much more appealing now that we have all matured.

So I was extra sad to hear the news, it would have been nice if he could have straightened up his act and lead a longer life, but he was who he was.

Posted by: Alli at March 10, 2010 6:45 PM

Posted by: replica at March 10, 2010 7:02 PM

License to Drive has one of THE funniest scenes ever, I'm referring to the whole: drunken guy inadvertently steals grandpa's Cadillac and starts mixing cocktails as he's being chased and all hell's breaking loose, Sinatra playing on the radio.

Posted by: BarbadoSlim at March 10, 2010 7:11 PM

It's all so sad. It's even sadder that most of the references to his memorable work is from twenty years ago.

And, Alli, you liked Feldman better than Haim? EEEEEWWWWWW!!! ;)

Posted by: Jelinas at March 10, 2010 7:44 PM

The saddest part of the whole affair is the fact that Haim had actual, bankable, talent. He wasn't some over groomed Disney product, so did Feldman (although his talents were more limited and at the end was getting typecasted). Anyway, I think it started going sour for him by the opening of Fast Getaway...that would be Part I.

Posted by: BarbadoSlim at March 10, 2010 7:53 PM

I know Jelinas, I was a strange kid. My tastes have improved since then but I am still strange.

Posted by: Alli at March 10, 2010 8:06 PM

Sad. I wasn't one of those kids who covered their walls with posters of movie stars; I was all about the musicians. Corey Haim was the lone exception to the rule. He had his own special space, surrounded by the rock stars.

Also, he has one of my favorite movie lines ever. "My own brother... a goddamn, shit sucking vampire. You wait til mom finds out, buddy!"

It was all in his delivery. It's a shame he was never able to stage a comeback, like RDJ.

Posted by: neurotica at March 10, 2010 8:13 PM

Holy crap, neurotica, you bring up an excellent point!

I am so relieved that my secret husband RDJ (please don't tell my otha husband, a-mista-JUSTIN-TIMBALAAAKE) clawed his way back to respectable actordom from the depths of drug addiction. It pains me to think of the magnificent movies that wouldn't have been made if he hadn't cleaned up his act. No Kiss Kiss Bang Bang! No Iron Man! No Sherlock Holmes! I'm so glad he got clean.

And, Alli, strange is beautiful in my book. And that makes you beautiful. Unless you're Corey Feldman. Then it's just oogly.

Posted by: Jelinas at March 10, 2010 8:22 PM

Corey Haim was indeed very talented. Just watch Lucas and you'll see it immediately. He was absolutely AMAZING in that part. And to think he really was 14, as his character was (I hate it when teenagers are played by people obviously much older).

Posted by: Snuggiepants the Deathbringer at March 10, 2010 8:47 PM

This was a great movie. I need to pull this one out of storage.

Posted by: Nicolae at March 10, 2010 9:43 PM

To me, the news of Corey's passing was made even sadder by the realisation that he was younger than me when he passed away.
I don't know how any parent can cope with that kind of loss.
My thoughts are with his family and (real) friends.

Posted by: frank (aka frank_247 aka the lone Scotsman) at March 11, 2010 3:48 AM

I always liked the Coreys 'The Lost Boys' is one of my all time favourite films and I just loved Haim in it, hell I loved Haim in anything.

Its so sad that there is no safety net for child actors when the work stops, they go from being a Hollywood darling to bottom of the pile and that must be unbearably hard to take.
I hope his family is coping at this time and my thoughts arw with them.

Posted by: Nieve 'The Threadkiller Queen' at March 11, 2010 6:06 AM

I gotta say I was kind of neutral about the Coreys. I had a mega crush on River Phoenix.

The Lost Boys soundtrack pulls me back to the sulky boy crazy tomboy I was in 9th grade. 'Cry little sister' does it every time. INXS exploded after that too. I had a Jason Patric, Michael Hutchence thing going- still love long hair.

"My own brother, a vampire!"

Plus Kiefer was an excellent baddie those years with Stand by Me and Lost Boys, snarling that top lip of his.

"Maggots Michael. You're eating maggots."

Posted by: bananapanda at March 11, 2010 10:18 AM

Bananapanda you just took me back to some wonderful memories of that Kiefer snarl. Mmmm...
I was so sad to get Pissboy's text yesterday that Corey Haim had passed. He was always so up and down that you just had to root for him to be up again and somehow stay up.
He was definitely one of of my top Tiger Beat and Bop magazine heartthrobs covering my walls in the 80s.
Drugs suck. They suck the life out of you and those around you while you're living, and then they take your life.
RIP Lucas.

Posted by: Whorish Mouth at March 11, 2010 12:17 PM


















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