Actor Corey Feldman's documentary exposing alleged sexual predators in Hollywood, (My) Truth: The Rape of Two Coreys, suffered multiple technical problems during its Monday streaming premiere.
On Monday, Feldman, 48, premiered his documentary about the abuse he alleges they experienced, including three men he has previously accused of sexual abuse, actor Jon Grissom (who appeared alongside Feldman and Haim in the movies License to Drive and Dream a Little Dream), former talent manager Marty Weiss and Alphy Hoffman, the owner of a defunct L.A. nightclub for underage actors called Alphy's Soda Pop Club. Both Grissom and Weiss have previously denied the allegations.
In (My) Truth: The Rape of Two Coreys, Feldman also named actor Charlie Sheen. Feldman alleges that, before his death, Haim described being raped by Sheen on the set of the 1986 David Seltzer movie Lucas.
"He went into great detail," Feldman said in the interview. "He told me 'Charlie bent me over in between two trailers and put Crisco oil on my butt and raped me in broad daylight. Anybody could have walked by. Anybody could have seen it.'"
Several other people, including Feldman's ex-wife Susannah Sprague, corroborated hearing the accusation from Haim before his death. Sheen denied the allegations via representatives.
But while Feldman's documentary highlighting both new and extant accusations of sexual abuse screened for its audience at the Directors Guild Theater in Los Angeles (after delays), the accompanying livestream failed to work for users who had paid $20 for access to the streaming premiere