A child star’s battle with fame and Hollywood’s dark side

Corey Haim’s story is a haunting reminder of how quickly Hollywood can turn a child into a commodity, then discard him when the damage shows. From the outside, he was the cheeky, lovable kid from The Lost Boys, a poster on millions of bedroom walls. Inside, he was a frightened boy numbing trauma, loneliness, and impossible pressure with whatever pills he could find. The industry that praised his talent never protected his innocence.

 
 

In the end, it wasn’t a scandalous overdose that killed him, but a body worn down by years of abuse and neglect. He died at 38, broke, sick, and still trying to prove he could be “the old Corey” again. What remains is not just a cautionary tale, but a plea: to believe children when they say they’ve been hurt, to treat addiction as illness, and to remember the human being behind the headlines.