Michael Cornelison began his professional career as an actor in 1967 at the age of fifteen, appearing in a series of educational shorts for Coronet Films. In 1974, Michael co-starred with Cliff Robertson and Robert Preston in the ABC-TV movie My Father's House (1975) (TV). In 1978, Cornelison returned to Los Angeles for an extended run. He completed pilots for three television series: Nightside, Inspector Perez and Family In Blue. He also guest-starred on many series in the mid-eighties, including Hill Street Blues, Remington Steele, Dallas, Knot's Landing and The Greatest American Hero, among others. Michael also starred in and co-produced Stephen King's The Woman in the Room (1983), the first collaboration between Stephen King and Frank Darabont (The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile). In 1984, he was lured back to the Midwest by the prospect of being artistic director of his own theatre, The Two Rivers Acting Company. In the ensuing two decades, Michael has appeared in a wide variety of plays, including classics such as A Man For All Seasons, Inherit The Wind, Of Mice And Men and To Kill A Mockingbird and contemporary works like Camping With Henry And Tom, Sideman, The Guys and The Complete Works Of Wllm. Shkspr (Abridged). He also served as artistic director of Rejection Slip Theatre, a radio comedy/drama anthology which ran on WHO radio for over ten years. In addition, Cornelison has done a great deal of work in partnership with writer/director Max Allan Collins (The Road To Perdition), having appeared in no less than five films for Collins, Mommy, _Mommy II: Mommys Day (1997)_, _Real Time: Siege at Lucas Street_, Elliot Ness - An Untouchable Life and Three Women. Cornelison also narrated Collin's award -winning documentary Mike Hammer's Mickey Spillane. Other film work included an appearance in Rain, produced by Martin Scorsese. He has recently recorded "A Little Death", a Mike Hammer adventure audio novel, starring Stacy Keach as Hammer, and will play Captain Pat Chambers in a second Hammer story, "Encore for Murder". Both written by Max Allan Collins and based on original material by the late Mickey Spillane. He makes his home in Iowa with his wife, Cindi and his son, Nick.
David and Linda Howard are successful yuppies from LA. When he gets a job disappointment, David convinces Linda that they should quit their jobs, liquidate their assets, and emulate the movie Easy Rider, spending the rest of their lives travelling around America...in a Winnebago! (This is a kind of large, luxurious mobile home which suits a 1980's yuppie more than the counterculture dropout approach of Easy Rider.) His idealized, unrealistic plans soon begin to go spectacularly wrong.
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Scott, Chris, Johnny, Brian and his girlfriend Natalie are traveling together to spend a couple of days together nearby a lake. In a remote road in the limits of a cornfield, Scott hits a crow with his truck and their car breaks down. Johnny crosses the cornfield to seek help in an old farmhouse and vanishes. Brian and Chris cross the cornfield together heading to the house. Meanwhile, Natalie is dragged by something and Scott unsuccessfully tries to help her. Soon, the three friends find that they are stranded and a supernatural force is holding them in the farmhouse.