What I Liked: Curse of Chucky used a small scale format for the story and we continue with that here. The whole thing takes place in a mental hospital in the middle of nowhere and our favorite killer doll picks off the patients one by one. I’m sure the limited location and relatively small cast of Curse and Cult were necessities due to the paltry $5 million budgets but they work perfectly fine with the franchise.
This isn’t exactly something that I “liked” but there are
some gruesome deaths. Chucky drills into
the back of someone’s head and the bit comes out through the eye, heads are
smashed to a pulp and Chucky sticks his small arm down someone’s throat and
rips out their, uh, larynx? I’m not
sure. He tears something out and it’s
uncomfortable. The series hasn’t shied
away from getting nasty with the killing methods before but it hits harder this
time due to the more serious tone.
Fiona Dourif returns as Nica and delivers another solid
performance. She doesn’t know what the
fuck to do or think since being locked up in prison and now a medium security
hospital. Dourif conveys frustration and
exasperation well while trying to keep it together enough so she appears to be
improving her mental health. Shout out
to Grace Lynn Kung (Miss Sloane) who almost steals the show as one of
the other patients. She plays the part
with high intensity not trusting Nica and thinking she knows what’s best for
everyone. Eventually Chucky reveals
himself when he targets her and she freaks out because she knows he won’t stop
until everyone’s dead.
What I Didn’t Like: The plot tends to tread water
with the characters going back and forth over whether Nica or Chucky is
responsible for the murders taking place.
It feels like they never stop debating if Chucky is alive or not and it’s
tiring, especially because we know he damn well is alive. I’m glad they didn’t go down the road of
trying to trick the audience into thinking Nica could possibly be the culprit
because you can’t win in that scenario. Either
it’s not gonna be satisfying if someone other than Chucky is the killer or a
waste of time because we could’ve had more Chucky instead of a tale of
deception. Anyway, the story moves
forward pretty slowly with repeated scenes and it can be a bit of slog
sometimes.
*Spoilers. I mean
it. I’m about to complain about the
twist ending so this is your last warning.*
The filmmakers felt they needed a new gimmick to breathe life into the
thirty year old series and what they came up with is Charles Lee Ray’s soul can
now inhabit an unlimited number of bodies simultaneously (this includes dolls
and humans). As long as the magic words
are spoken (no amulet needed) he can multiply himself. Hence the title because it’s like he’s
forming his own cult. Except there are
no true believers since they’re technically all the same person. Ray’s only doing this now because he recently
discovered the voodoo spell on the internet.
The idea is ok but man, the execution feels cheap. We already discussed with Bride how
adding more creatures is a fairly common occurrence for a sequel, sometimes
yielding incredible results. It’s the
way they do it here that I take issue with.
I don’t like that Ray can clone himself to no end. Either there needs to be a tradeoff like each
copy is less effective than the one before or multiple bodies can only be
occupied temporarily or the process to create another possessed doll should be
difficult to perform (instead it’s a cinch and basically instantaneous, say two
sentences and you’re done), or he should’ve started an actual cult with his
followers inhabiting other dolls or people sent out to do his bidding. They give Ray way too much of a power upgrade
and open the door for him to easily take over the world. More thought and restraint should’ve been put
into this.
Overall Impressions: Despite the questionable gimmick the filmmakers decided to employ this time Cult is sorta the closest to the original trilogy than the other sequels. You have Chucky roaming around killing folks one at a time, the tone is serious except for the occasional joke from Chucky, no one except the protagonist believes the doll is alive until it’s too late and hell, even Alex Vincet returns as Andy Barclay.
Admittedly pitching this as the fourth best installment may
not convince too many folks to take a look.
You can’t just jump into this one either. You would wanna watch at least Curse
to better understand what’s going on. I
dunno. The movie’s fine.
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