Lost in the Maize
"He began to walk in that direction, not having to bull through the corn any more. The row was taking him in the direction he wanted to go, naturally. The row ended up ahead. Ended? No, emptied out into some sort of clearing..."
There's just something about a field of corn that spells creepy. Maybe it's the fact that corn stalks grow very tall and seem to go on endlessly, preventing anyone who happens to be wandering among them from seeing more than a few feet ahead at a time. Also, each stalk looks exactly the same, so good luck finding your way out. Combined with the fact that they are only found in rural areas, this means that you could be out in the middle of nowhere and no one would see you disappear, or even be around to hear you scream on the off chance that you are not alone.
If characters find themselves in a cornfield, they will almost always get lost. Frantic chases through cornfields are popular in the Horror genre, and double points if it happens to be at night.
Note that despite the trope name, scenes like this don't necessarily have to involve corn. Long grass is also popular, especially in wilderness settings, and this trope can apply to other kinds of vegetation where it's hard to see anything below neck level.
This is also the place to find Scary Scarecrows. Or Crop Circles.
Comics
- In an issue of The Maze Agency comic book, a murder is committed in a cornfield maze and the body strung up as scarecrow to hide it.
- A villain in the Hack Slash miniseries My First Maniac is a vengeful, undead farmer obsessed with keeping people off his property and away from his daughter. Guessed what he farmed.
- Though it later turns out the farmer isn't the slasher. Also, the cornfield is filled with razor wire, nails and spiked pits.
Film
- There's a scene involving a chase through a cornfield in the movie version of Harry Potter.
- Signs: the priest lives next to a very creepy cornfield; he ends up being chased through it at night.
- The X-Files movie, with the bees in cornfields...
- The Lost World: Jurassic Park uses the tall grass variant. Doesn't make much of a difference, though, 'cuz everyone knows that Everything's Scarier with Velociraptors!
- The crop-duster attack in North by Northwest takes place in and around a cornfield.
- In Forrest Gump, as a little girl, Jenny runs into the cornfield behind their house to hide from her drunken abusive father ("Dear God, make me a bird, so I can fly far, far, far away from here").
- Also, the scene in the 1967 Bonnie and Clyde, where Bonnie runs away through one because she misses her momma.
- The cornfield rave massacre in Freddy vs. Jason.
- In 2010, a horror movie all about murders in a corn maze (at night!), creatively called The Maze was released. Though in actuality, viewers probably do see more corn than murder.
- Cry Baby Lane has this in the climax.
- The Mummy Returns has a scene where a bunch of Mooks are ambushed and killed by pygmie zombies in waist-high plant life.
Literature
- The Goosebumps book The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight has this, naturally.
- In Dorothy Canfield Fisher's short story "Sex Education" a town preacher lurks in a cornfield waiting to jump and rape any young girl dumb enough to wander nearby. It Gets Worse: It's heavily implied by the female characters that a number of other men in their town have similarly questionable hobbies, also involving young girls and cornfields.
- In The Stand, a number of characters dream about being chased through a cornfield by the Dark Man.
- Averted in Reaper Man, where the term "corn" actually refers to wheat. This doesn't stop many American readers from getting a mental image of Death toiling in a creepy cornfield when they read this Discworld novel.
- In The Lovely Bones, Susie is cutting through a cornfield on her way home from school when a neighbor lures her into a secret underground room, rapes her and kills her.
- The Jerome Bixby short story "It's a Good Life", where the Reality Warper Anthony Fremont literally sends people who do anything he doesn't like to the cornfield behind his family's home. Served as the basis for a memorable The Twilight Zone episode.
- Stephen King's short story Children of the Corn served as loose inspiration for an endless string of movies which are probably the example that a lot of people remember, and contributes a great deal to cornfields being associated with creepiness. The page quote above, from the original story, gives an example.
Live Action TV
- The series finale of Carnivale has the climax take place in a cornfield, with Brother Justin chasing after Ben with a scythe, no less.
- An episode of The Middle had the teenaged son lose his little brother in a cornfield maze, and he kept running into the creepy caretaker who told him about how he had lost his own little brother in a cornfield all those years ago.
- The Criminal Minds episode "Middle Man", and the end of "The Big Game".
- This eerie sketch from Human Giant exemplifies the mystique of the Corn Maze.
- The Bones episode "Mummy in the Maze".
Music
- Sufjan Stevens' Illinois album has a short track about a Real Life corn maze, titled "A Conjunction of Drones Simulating the Way in Which Sufjan Stevens Has an Existential Crisis in the Great Godfrey Maze".
Video Games
- There was a field in Fallout 2 where some guys would scare intruders through ghostly images to keep them away. I think it was a corn field...
- The fourth campaign of Left 4 Dead has a "crescendo event" (scripted horde sequence) in a corn field in the last level.
- Never touch the cornfields in Medievil. You'll die very quickly. We're probably lucky they don't show what kills you...
- In the horror Adventure Game Sanitarium, there's a creepy pumpkin patch in one chapter that fits this trope.
- There is exactly one frightening scene in the video-game adaptation of Land of the Dead and it involves having to run through a cornfield as you hear zombies crashing around you unseen.
- In Batman Doom, one such maze pops up near the beginning of the level with the Scarecrow boss fight. It's full of gangsters and even spotting the passages is a problem (the automap helps). Once you're past this part, the rest of the level is thankfully free of confusing view-obfuscating maize.
Webcomics
- The Halloween-themed Skin Deep story "The One-Eyed Bear" centers around a road trip to an annual haunted corn maze attraction in Verona, MO referred to, appropriately enough, as The MAiZE. (See Real Life, below.) In keeping with getting lost, they stumble onto the attraction while fleeing from a nightmare and a demon, only to be menaced by a hockey-mask-wearing, chainsaw wielding maniac who is actually both a performer in the haunted maze and a bugbear in human guise.
Western Animation
- The Simpsons once got lost in a corn maze.
- The Tick (animation) had villainous sunflowerman El Seed raise an army out of an evil cornfield maze.
- Johnny Bravo, in its episode "Johnny, Real Good" (a parody of It's A Good Life) has this as one of the torments that the Reality Warper boy inflicts upon Johnny: teleportation to an actual cornfield (not really that horrible, but still a minor annoyance for Johnny who has to walk back home), which becomes a Running Gag. At the end of the episode, he teleports sleeping Johnny in his bed onto a lonely island--covered with maize.
- Fillmore!!: "Two Wheels, Full Throttle, No Brakes". Of course X Middle School has its own corn maze. Why wouldn't it?
- "The corn! IT ALL LOOKS THE SAME!"
Real Life
- Actual cornfield mazes are built in real life as attractions, and often give people the chance to go through them at night. Occasionally the cornfields are 'haunted' by people dressed in costume.
- Averted in previous centuries, when corn hadn't yet been selectively bred to stand taller than a human. At least one Civil War battle's events had to be re-examined by historians when it was pointed out that corn grew only waist-high in the 1860s, hence couldn't have provided concealment to standing soldiers.
- Fark.com offered the following headline on September 6, 2006:
World's largest corn maze built in Nebraska. Maze is designed to be much like Nebraska in that you enter, see nothing but corn, then leave.