Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuIn 1942 a soldier and a special division of psychics working for the American military must use the help of Andre Toulon's puppets to infiltrate a secret Nazi headquarters and put an end to ... Alles lesenIn 1942 a soldier and a special division of psychics working for the American military must use the help of Andre Toulon's puppets to infiltrate a secret Nazi headquarters and put an end to the evil experiments being conducted there.In 1942 a soldier and a special division of psychics working for the American military must use the help of Andre Toulon's puppets to infiltrate a secret Nazi headquarters and put an end to the evil experiments being conducted there.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Becky Rogers
- Bund Girl #1
- (as Rebecca Rogers)
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With their former owners dead, the puppets are given to the military to determine how they move about, drawing attention from a deranged Nazi commandant and his assistant looking to control their own puppets and forcing the two sides to utilize their resources in order to stop the other.
This here was a rather decent enough entry. One of the film's few positives here is the way this one dives into the concluding chapter of the storyline present, making this a rather strong outing. The fact that the dolls are given straight to the military in order to continue their research on how they work and what their orders are going to be for the majority of the film is all given out in the first opening minutes here, wasting no time and getting this plotline going. This quick-moving story enables the far-reaching elements such as clairvoyance and dream premonitions to emerge as quite logical in this universe, introducing the concept of the dueling group of mystics battling to keep themselves secret from each other or the highly enjoyable series of interactions that play up the need to complete the dolls in their own spaces. This setup allows the film to have some rather fun cheesy action with this mix of magic and sorcery. The idea of watching the Nazi's conduct their experiments, including them going through the test subjects in their chambers to the experiments with the captured dolls as well as the daughter, offer up some truly enjoyable supernatural-themed action as the ability to control and manipulate everyone around them to do their bidding. Not only do we see their own soldiers and subordinates being controlled in some rather tense scenes in the compound but the encounter at the refinery allows for a much more chilling demonstration of their powers when mixed together with the puppet action here in the finale. With the gunplay coming into play with the puppets alongside the rest of the battles against the controllers, there's a lot to like here from the kinetic action and fine bloodshed with the dolls in play to hold it up rather nicely. That said, there are a few minor flaws to be had here. The main issue to be had is the lack of obvious puppet action since there's way too much time spent elsewhere with this one. There's way too much emphasis on the mysticism between the scientist and his daughter attempting to explain their powers that really just keep going on in stilted English full of gibberish and nonsensical megalomaniacal threats rather than putting the puppets to work. By having both sides gravitate towards speechifying as well as the overwhelming need for standing around letting their powers take center stage rather than focusing on all-out puppet action, the film takes on more of a fantasy vibe more than any other entry in the series which might be somewhat detrimental. The other factor is the cheap-looking special effects for the puppets, who look for very CGI-based and don't really have much realism in their few scenes. Beyond this, there isn't much else to this one.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence, Language and Nudity.
This here was a rather decent enough entry. One of the film's few positives here is the way this one dives into the concluding chapter of the storyline present, making this a rather strong outing. The fact that the dolls are given straight to the military in order to continue their research on how they work and what their orders are going to be for the majority of the film is all given out in the first opening minutes here, wasting no time and getting this plotline going. This quick-moving story enables the far-reaching elements such as clairvoyance and dream premonitions to emerge as quite logical in this universe, introducing the concept of the dueling group of mystics battling to keep themselves secret from each other or the highly enjoyable series of interactions that play up the need to complete the dolls in their own spaces. This setup allows the film to have some rather fun cheesy action with this mix of magic and sorcery. The idea of watching the Nazi's conduct their experiments, including them going through the test subjects in their chambers to the experiments with the captured dolls as well as the daughter, offer up some truly enjoyable supernatural-themed action as the ability to control and manipulate everyone around them to do their bidding. Not only do we see their own soldiers and subordinates being controlled in some rather tense scenes in the compound but the encounter at the refinery allows for a much more chilling demonstration of their powers when mixed together with the puppet action here in the finale. With the gunplay coming into play with the puppets alongside the rest of the battles against the controllers, there's a lot to like here from the kinetic action and fine bloodshed with the dolls in play to hold it up rather nicely. That said, there are a few minor flaws to be had here. The main issue to be had is the lack of obvious puppet action since there's way too much time spent elsewhere with this one. There's way too much emphasis on the mysticism between the scientist and his daughter attempting to explain their powers that really just keep going on in stilted English full of gibberish and nonsensical megalomaniacal threats rather than putting the puppets to work. By having both sides gravitate towards speechifying as well as the overwhelming need for standing around letting their powers take center stage rather than focusing on all-out puppet action, the film takes on more of a fantasy vibe more than any other entry in the series which might be somewhat detrimental. The other factor is the cheap-looking special effects for the puppets, who look for very CGI-based and don't really have much realism in their few scenes. Beyond this, there isn't much else to this one.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence, Language and Nudity.
Axis Termination is the final part of the Puppet Master Axis trilogy, and it's quite a disappointment, lacking the fun factor of the previous two films. It's an overly talky effort, with not enough puppet action, and the acting is decidedly dodgy: Paul Logan as heroic Captain Brooks is wooden, Kevin Scott Allen and Tonya Kay (boasting a Botox trout pout) hide their lack of talent behind dodgy German accents, whereas George Appleby as Russian doctor Ivan Ivanov doesn't even try, his cadence just bizarre.
The film also suffers from bad CGI for the numerous bullet hits (I hate CGI blood), a dreary plot that wastes its interesting 'psychics at war' concept, and uninspired direction from Charles Band, who tries to disguise his apparent lack of interest by swathing everything in strong primary coloured lighting.
Given the delightfully OTT approach Band took with Axis Rising, I had hoped that this one would reach hitherto unseen heights of outrageousness; instead, it all feels very underwhelming.
The film also suffers from bad CGI for the numerous bullet hits (I hate CGI blood), a dreary plot that wastes its interesting 'psychics at war' concept, and uninspired direction from Charles Band, who tries to disguise his apparent lack of interest by swathing everything in strong primary coloured lighting.
Given the delightfully OTT approach Band took with Axis Rising, I had hoped that this one would reach hitherto unseen heights of outrageousness; instead, it all feels very underwhelming.
Well the end of a trilogy and also the end of a cycle or whatever you want to call it. Apparently the newest entry after this (movie number 12 by the way, which is called "Littlest Reich") will be a reboot. And it's funny because there will be an original cast member (at least), although Barbara Crampton did not have a character name in the very first Puppet Master.
But back to this one. This concludes a trilogy within the franchise and as I and probably others have stated before you could have told the story in one movie, but they stretched it over 3. Puppetry is good, though I'm not as impressed as I was with the first one. While the budget restrictions probably are the same, the very first one was way back ... Anyway there are worse movies (even in this franchise) and if you want to have a complete overview of things (like me), you'll probably watch it, even if it doesn't matter to the next one ...
But back to this one. This concludes a trilogy within the franchise and as I and probably others have stated before you could have told the story in one movie, but they stretched it over 3. Puppetry is good, though I'm not as impressed as I was with the first one. While the budget restrictions probably are the same, the very first one was way back ... Anyway there are worse movies (even in this franchise) and if you want to have a complete overview of things (like me), you'll probably watch it, even if it doesn't matter to the next one ...
P Puppet Master: Axis Termination (2017) on Tubi is the final chapter in the Axis trilogy. The German forces are prepared to end the puppet threat once and for all, unaware that the puppets plan to infiltrate their base and bring down their reign of terror forever.
Directed by Charles Band (Trancers), this installment stars George Appleby (Game of Thrones), Tonya Kay (Saving My Baby), Paul Logan (Alien Apocalypse), Tania Fox (Art of the Dead), and Diana Prince (Evil Bong 888).
Despite Band's legacy with the Puppet Master series, this film feels notably different from earlier entries, and it's a disappointing conclusion to the Axis trilogy. I'd actually rank it among the three weakest films in the series. Overall, it may be worth watching for dedicated fans, but it doesn't stand out as one of the better entries. I'd score this a 3.5/10.
Directed by Charles Band (Trancers), this installment stars George Appleby (Game of Thrones), Tonya Kay (Saving My Baby), Paul Logan (Alien Apocalypse), Tania Fox (Art of the Dead), and Diana Prince (Evil Bong 888).
Despite Band's legacy with the Puppet Master series, this film feels notably different from earlier entries, and it's a disappointing conclusion to the Axis trilogy. I'd actually rank it among the three weakest films in the series. Overall, it may be worth watching for dedicated fans, but it doesn't stand out as one of the better entries. I'd score this a 3.5/10.
I love the Puppet Master series, but this is just plain bad. I get this trilogy isn't to be taken seriously, but there are limits. Do yourself a favour and stick with the original 3 movies!!
Best part of the movie? The closing credits.
Best part of the movie? The closing credits.
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- WissenswertesMost of the Nazi thugs are played by fans who paid to have a role in the movie.
- PatzerEven though the movie takes place during WWII, the establishing shots of Los Angeles are obviously very recent.
- VerbindungenEdited into Carnage Collection - Puppet Master: Trunk Full of Terror (2022)
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- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 15 Min.(75 min)
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