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Curse of Chucky

  • 2013
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 37 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,6/10
45.987
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Brad Dourif and Fiona Dourif in Curse of Chucky (2013)
Chucky the killer doll returns to terrorize a family funeral.
trailer wiedergeben1:15
9 Videos
99+ Fotos
Slasher HorrorSupernatural HorrorHorrorThriller

Nach dem mysteriösen Tod ihrer Mutter beginnt Nica zu vermuten, dass die sprechende, rothaarige Puppe, mit der ihre besuchende Nichte gespielt hat, der Schlüssel zu jüngerem Blutvergießen un... Alles lesenNach dem mysteriösen Tod ihrer Mutter beginnt Nica zu vermuten, dass die sprechende, rothaarige Puppe, mit der ihre besuchende Nichte gespielt hat, der Schlüssel zu jüngerem Blutvergießen und Chaos sein könnte.Nach dem mysteriösen Tod ihrer Mutter beginnt Nica zu vermuten, dass die sprechende, rothaarige Puppe, mit der ihre besuchende Nichte gespielt hat, der Schlüssel zu jüngerem Blutvergießen und Chaos sein könnte.

  • Regie
    • Don Mancini
  • Drehbuch
    • Don Mancini
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Chantal Quesnelle
    • Fiona Dourif
    • Jordan Gavaris
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    5,6/10
    45.987
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Don Mancini
    • Drehbuch
      • Don Mancini
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Chantal Quesnelle
      • Fiona Dourif
      • Jordan Gavaris
    • 254Benutzerrezensionen
    • 203Kritische Rezensionen
    • 58Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos9

    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 1:15
    Theatrical Trailer
    Curse of Chucky
    Clip 0:57
    Curse of Chucky
    Curse of Chucky
    Clip 0:57
    Curse of Chucky
    Curse of Chucky
    Clip 0:43
    Curse of Chucky
    Curse Of Chucky: We Found Him
    Clip 1:38
    Curse Of Chucky: We Found Him
    Curse Of Chucky: Barb Sees A Rat
    Clip 1:39
    Curse Of Chucky: Barb Sees A Rat
    Curse Of Chucky: What's For Dinner
    Clip 0:42
    Curse Of Chucky: What's For Dinner

    Fotos266

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    Topbesetzung29

    Ändern
    Chantal Quesnelle
    Chantal Quesnelle
    • Sarah
    Fiona Dourif
    Fiona Dourif
    • Nica
    Jordan Gavaris
    Jordan Gavaris
    • US EX Guy
    Danielle Bisutti
    Danielle Bisutti
    • Barb
    A Martinez
    A Martinez
    • Father Frank
    Maitland McConnell
    • Jill
    Brennan Elliott
    Brennan Elliott
    • Ian
    Summer H. Howell
    Summer H. Howell
    • Alice
    • (as Summer Howell)
    Adam Hurtig
    Adam Hurtig
    • Officer Stanton
    Darren Wall
    • Highway Cop
    Will Woytowich
    Will Woytowich
    • Lead Fireman
    Anne Leveille
    • Young Nica
    Kally Berard
    • Young Barb
    Kyle Nobess
    • Nica's Dad
    Brad Dourif
    Brad Dourif
    • Charles Lee Ray
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Bobby Robidoux
    • Party Goer with Super 8 Cam
    Tyhr Trubiak
    Tyhr Trubiak
    • Chicago Police Officer
    Kevin Anderson
    • Judge
    • Regie
      • Don Mancini
    • Drehbuch
      • Don Mancini
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen254

    5,645.9K
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    7gregsrants

    New Life For Old Franchise

    Chucky was always my favorite of the many serial killers that sprouted from the 70's and 80's slasher films. Sure, Jason Voorhees, Michael Myers, Pinhead, Leatherface and Freddy Krueger were all instrumental in my fascination and divulgence into the horror genre - but the possessed Good Guys doll by the name of Chucky was always my favorite of the tentpole franchises.

    It is hard to fathom that it was 25 years ago when Chucky was first launched into our pop culture references with Child's Play. Directed to Tom Holland on a story by Don Mancini, the 1988 horror surprised most everyone with a $35 million box office gross against a paltry $9 million budget.

    Sequels ensued with Child's Play 2 (1990), Child's Play 3 (1991), Bride of Chucky (1998) and Seed of Chucky (2004). Through each film, the horror seemed lessened by the increasing use of black humor scattered amongst the bloodshed.

    This is not to suggest that the Child's Play franchise lost its way, but it did veer off the original path. This deviation was not lost of creator Don Mancini who takes charge behind the camera for Curse of Chucky now available on VOD.

    In this sixth edition of the evil doll's murderous exploits, Chucky is shipped from a police evidence lockup to a home of a young woman, Nica, confined to a wheelchair since birth. Chucky's first victim alienates the young woman and when other family and friends arrive at the house to comfort Nica, it allows for a higher body count and a night of mayhem. Nica is able to put the pieces together to eventually figure the doll at the centre of the bloodshed, but her limited mobility will be both a benefit and a hindrance on her ultimate survival.

    We've come a long way since 1988 and Mancini has more digital tricks up his sleeve to bring the doll to life. Some might balk at the idea of a CGI motioned doll, but take our word for it, the added computer detail only adds to Chucky's evil looks. There are a few scenes where our villain gets to show real emotion using his rubber face and it is the technology that a lot of horror enthusiasts despise that is at the root of the improvements.

    Mancini did go back to the roots with the story that focuses more on the development of the horror rather than the slapstick funduggery that overly consumed Bride and Seed of Chucky. Replacing much of the pop culture referencing in-jokes are some tense moments of horror and some valued kills that value quality over quantity.

    Curse of Chucky goes places unexpected for a fifth sequel and it betters any of the films that preceded it in the series. Chucky is meaner, nastier and more patient which allows for better horror. There are some good scares in Curse and Chucky's evil might never have been better punctuated on screen. A solid story – one with flashback ties that support Chucky's choice of family terrorizing and some after the credit scenes that tie in the rest of the series – compliments the action and sets the stage for what we hope is the continuation of the franchise.

    www.killerreviews.com
    6CuriosityKilledShawn

    Good Luck Chuck

    From the first couple of minutes it's easy to tell that Don Mancini is treating Curse more as a horror film than the previous couple of entries in the series. The movie is shot and edited to build suspense and is a world apart from the sitcom trappings of Seed.

    A girl in a wheelchair (Brad Dourif's hot daughter Fiona) living in a rural home with her troubled mother receives a mysterious package one afternoon. It's Chucky, and he's somehow managed to get himself in the mail again. He's arrived to settle a score, and soon enough he has brainwashed a child into keeping his secret and is sneaking about in the shadows offing unsuspecting victims.

    Many people are saying that this movie is a return to form, and that it retcons Bride and Seed out of existence. Er...no, the film very much DOES acknowledge the events of Bride and Seed. Even if you paid the bare minimum of attention it would be hard to not to realize this. But I guess that expecting the movie to go in a different direction only led to further surprises when it eventually did tie in to the previous movies as well as giving us more back-story to Charles Lee Ray.

    I was worried that Chucky would be all CGI as Kevin Yagher has not been involved with the series since Bride, and while there IS some CGI, he's anamatronic for the most part. Instead of hogging the camera though he keeps quiet watches the humans interact for about half the movie before unleashing toy terror. Horror composer Joseph LoDuca delivers a pastiche of the Renzetti, Revell, and Donaggio's efforts without giving Curse a signature sound of its own. Not really a complaint, but more of a missed chance.

    It's certainly a worthy sequel and a can be viewed as a genuine horror film without any of the guilty pleasure of Seed. Keep watching to the end of the credits for a further surprise that ties the series together even more (though it does contradict the closing scene before the credits actually roll).
    amesmonde

    What every Child's Play fan wants, friends till the end.

    A family gather together for a funeral, only a killer doll has an old score to settle; and blood & mayhem ensue.

    Opening in a creepy large house (with its own Diamonds are Forever type lift), a mysterious death occurs in the first few minutes after a revamped 'Good Guy' doll is delivered. From the outset there's an updated excellently designed Chucky doll and Joseph Loduca's melodic eerie music score which sets the tone.

    There's plenty of atmosphere in this installment from series veteran Don Mancini, with Curse sharing much with the Psycho films in design and pace. Brad Dourif again voices Chucky. The great one liners are fewer, a bit more poignant and cutting. There's a few relationship surprises and story twists. Web-cam moment, stitches reveal and closing are particularly memorable, also there's a great scene after the credits.

    Some of the cast are debatably too polished, nevertheless, the horror elements are there and include the original mix of Nanny, young child and a killer doll. The child actor Summer H. Howell is strong and wheelchair bound Fiona Douif (daughter of Brad) is notable as Nica.

    Many scenes are effective with inbuilt tension and jump scares, notably the shower encounter and dinner gathering. With lingering camera movements and interesting angles, Mancini also leaves plenty to the imagination as some of the set ups take place off screen, that said there are lots of effects, blood and gore on display - decapitation, an electrocution, an empty eyeball socket and an axe attack to name a few.

    There are lots of nice touches that are fitting to the modern Chucky doll, that mirror today's toys, making him all the more menacing when he comes to 'life'. Pupils dilate, his eyes are bloodshot, walking and running - Chucky is back better, creepier and badder than before. For die hard Child's Play fans Dourif appears briefly in his serial killer Charles Lee Ray guise, some old photos and newspaper clippings feature Andy and scene's link direct to the first outing.

    What the production has saved on the lack of locations, to it's credit, the money has been put into the excellent special effects. Mancini returns it to its Child's Play roots while making references to the rest of the series including a great cameo from one of it's most colourful characters.

    It delivers with its back to horror basics approach, updated effects, Mancini's Hitchcockian execution and links to its previous counterparts. With this in mind Curse of Chucky is less likely to date than some of its predecessors. Recommended.
    7Simon_Says_Movies

    A Shockingly Efficient Franchise Revival

    Often pushed to a second tier among other iconic horror franchises like Friday the 13th, Halloween and Nightmare on Elm Street, the murderous misadventures of Charles Lee "Chucky" Ray have been just as persistent and influential as those other game changing series. But Chucky, so too like Jason, Freddy and Michael, these characters have had their fare share of missteps in terms of quality, and in many cases saw their franchises descend into unintentional self parody.

    The Child's Play saga has seen a similar trajectory, with the 1988 original still standing as a horror classic, it's immediate predecessor coming off as passable but more or less a carbon copy and the third as a junky, bland mess. After a seven year hiatus, the surprisingly satirical Bride of Chucky arrived along with a perfect Jennifer Tilly as Chucky's partner in slaughter. Things again took a turn for the worse in Seed of Chucky which aimed to amp up the camp of Bride but it came off as a grating and, ironically, childish.

    Almost 25 years on we now get Curse of Chucky, a direct to home video instalment – a rather unceremonious release which certainly did not instil confidence in this horror fan. Well, you can consider my mouth shut as this is not only a strong, well crafted fright flick, it's easily among the franchise's best entries. Curse of Chucky takes the more gruesome elements that worked so well early on, some of the parodic flare of Bride and then even goes on to subvert horror norms and cliché. This is a film that knows firmly where it stands and the expectations of its audience and uses those preconceived notions to surprise in a number of ways.

    The biggest and most pleasant realization I made from the onset is how well crafted Curse of Chucky is, from the art direction that brings life to your typical isolated home (at which our bloody events can transpire) the composition of shots which expertly use every angle in the book to bring complexity to the carnage and its generally polished look. It certainly doesn't bare any resemblance to most home video fare that looks as if it were shot in somebody's basement. But the accomplished aesthetics only serve as the launching point for some clever prods at the genre, some fun kills and a thorough grasp on its own franchise roots.

    One of the things Curse of Chucky is finally able to figure out is how to present an adult protagonist that would believably be in peril when facing off with a pint sized doll. Our heroine comes in the form of Fiona Dourif, daughter of Chucky's voice, the iconic Brad Dourif (whose cackling laugh still brings a weird smile to my face after all these years). Daughter Dourif's Nica you see is confined to a wheelchair, putting her quite literally on even ground when the climax rolls around. There is a young girl about, who serves as the vessel through which Chucky's evil rumblings are heard, but this is more about Nica, and it all works rather well. In the end, it really comes as no surprise that this entry is penned and directed by Don Mancini who has written every entry in the Child's Play franchise. Even though he is so close to the series and its central character, he has clearly taken the time to step back and re-approach his baby in new ways. It's not something you see too often from someone who has been involved with something for so long.

    Then we get the funny, subversive elements to the story which plays against our expectations, such as the role of a promiscuous nanny, who gets the knife and when and fake-out scares and potential deaths. Constructed in the way it is, Curse of Chucky should easily please fans of the franchise but also win over general fans of horror who are tired of seeing cookie cutter productions. There are certainly conventional elements at play, but it's all pulled off with a great deal of flare.

    As for Dourif's Chucky, he's as vulgar, funny and creepy as ever, and even when delivering more simplistic lines reminds us why the character has persisted. There will certainly be some who will overlook the more clever elements of Curse of Chucky and hone in on what remains ordinary, but for me it was time well spent and easily introduces a new spark to the franchise and shows there is life yet in everyone's favourite killer doll.
    6cornflakeboy20

    Return to formula, in the best sense

    Curse of Chucky is better than most horror movies that get a theatrical run. The staging is rather small, with a small unknown cast and a limited location, but they make the absolute best of everything they have. Brad Dourif, the original director, and another important cast member from parts 4 and 5 appear; and this movie actually seems like a return to the formula of the original movies, using some of the surprise and humor of the last two. A woman caring for a disabled daughter, and living in a lovely Gothic mansion, receives the Chucky doll anonymously. After being quickly dispatched, the rest of the family arrives to take over the estate from the daughter. Among them is a little girl, who adopts the Chucky doll. The parents of the girl seem to have ulterior motives and a strange relationship with their babysitter, which is later revealed as a pleasant and humorous twist. Chucky begins killing off the victims, using the creepy mansion as a great backdrop. The camera work is great. The suspense is good. There are some great kills. This movie does not look cheap. Its only VOD concession seems to be that it sticks to the same location over the same night, and changes settings only rarely. The last entry seems to largely avoid parts 4 and 5, although it does not erase them completely. Often, horror movies that deviate from formula come out disastrous, but Chucky reinvented itself as a series with Bride and Seed of. Fans of those movies may be disappointed this doesn't pick right up where they left off. Still, it's a nice surprise to go back to the pure cheesy formula horror of the first three movies. The ending, of course, leaves room for a sequel that could play off the theme of the movie, and revisit dangling threads from the earlier series. Well worth renting, streaming, buying.

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    • Wissenswertes
      The knife Charles Lee Ray uses during the flashback sequence is the same knife Chucky uses throughout the first Child's Play movie.
    • Patzer
      When Nica goes to investigate the screams in the first part of the movie as she opens and closes the door she appears to be moving in a way that implies she is standing and not sitting in the wheelchair.
    • Zitate

      Chucky: 25 years. Since then a lot of families have come and gone. The Barclays, the Kincaids, the Tillys. But Nica, your family was always my favorite. And now, you're the last one standing. So to speak.

      [laughs evilly, then looks down at Nica]

      Chucky: You know, you remind me a lot of Andy Barclay. He was a whiney little bitch just like you.

      Nica: Did you kill him too?

      Chucky: More or less. I killed his childhood. And the truth is, I killed you 25 years ago, didn't I, Nica? You haven't been living. You can't call this living. You've just been on life support. Time to pull the fucking plug.

      Nica: [lifts her head up, looking at him] So, you never actually killed Andy Barclay, did you?

      Chucky: [steps back some] What?

      Nica: You know it's called Completion Anxiety. It's very common in males. You are a male, aren't you?

      Chucky: [glares] Oh, I'm gonna kill you slow.

      Nica: [laughs] Oh, now I get it. 25 years, must have been the slowest murder in history. I mean, what are you waiting for? A sign from God?

    • Crazy Credits
      There is a scene after the credits.
    • Alternative Versionen
      In the unrated version of Curse of Chucky the Barb death scene is more gory. (You see Chucky's knife stab into her eye). In the rated version of Curse, we see the back of Barb's head, and see Chucky's body lean forward and then hear her scream.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited from Chucky - Die Mörderpuppe (1988)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 24. Oktober 2013 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigte Staaten
      • Kanada
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Child's Play 6
    • Drehorte
      • Winnipeg, Manitoba, Kanada
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Universal 1440 Entertainment
      • David Kirschner Productions
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    • Budget
      • 5.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 37 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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