Orlando Sentinel

Corey Feldman: ‘I’m not playing around’

Actor defends need for $10M for kid-abuse film

- By Christie D’Zurilla

Corey Feldman, who last week announced a campaign to fund a movie about pedophilia in Hollywood, had to work to get his message across on the “Today” show Monday morning. Matt Lauer challenged Feldman’s claim that he needs $10 million to make the film.

Feldman said there is “a lot of darkness” in Hollywood right now, and it will keep unraveling, the actor and musician told Lauer. What is being seen now is the tip of the iceberg, Feldman said, and a feature film is the best way for him to share what he witnessed and experience­d as a former child actor.

Also, he said, the subject matter would require him to have a team of lawyers and a security detail around him at all times.

“I’m not playing around,” Feldman said. “It’s serious stuff, and I vow I will release every single name that I have any knowledge of. Period. And nobody’s going to stop me this time. As long as people support this.”

As of Monday morning, Feldman had raised about $160,000 toward the $10 million goal.

When pressed by Lauer — who noted “we’ve been down this road before” with Feldman, who said he was going to reveal Hollywood pedophiles in his 2013 memoir, “Coreyograp­hy” — the “Goonies” actor explained: “The publisher prevented me from writing the names down. They made me change the names.”

In the book, Feldman did share stories of his own abuse and that of the late Corey Haim while the two were young actors. Haim, who struggled with substance abuse when he was older, died in 2010 at age 38. In recent years, his mother, Judy Haim, has tried to distance herself from Feldman.

“If he finally decides to release names and tell the world who they are, for the sake of more victims, I will be 100 percent behind it. But if he’s waiting to release the names in the movie, I don’t support that. He doesn’t need $10 million to do it,” she said in a statement to “Today.”

Haim was blunter with the Hollywood Reporter during the weekend, saying: “Come on. It’s a long con . ... If he was serious about this, he’d share the informatio­n he has with the police.”

Feldman explained to Lauer that the statute of limitation­s had expired in California and, talking to Megyn Kelly on Monday in a different “Today” segment, said it wasn’t easy taking allegation­s to authoritie­s even when he was within the 10-year period. He said he gave the names to authoritie­s in Santa Barbara County when they were investigat­ing Michael Jackson.

“There are thousands of people in Hollywood who have this same informatio­n,” Feldman told Lauer on Monday. “Why is it all on me?”

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