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Tag: Don Mancini

  • Doc of Chucky Digs Into (Nearly) Every Detail About the Child’s Play Series

    Doc of Chucky Digs Into (Nearly) Every Detail About the Child’s Play Series

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    Chucky came to a sudden end earlier this year—but the TV show’s cancellation surely won’t be a final farewell for either the killer doll or the Child’s Play franchise. While Don Mancini and company cook up Chucky’s next adventure, the film series so far gets an affectionate, exhaustively detailed oral history in Doc of Chucky.

    Not to be confused with Living With Chucky, which came out last year, Doc of Chucky runs almost five hours—the signature mega-film style of director Thommy Hutson, who’s produced similarly epic takes on the Nightmare on Elm Street and Friday the 13th franchises.

    If five hours of Chucky feels like overkill—something the possessed Good Guy doll knows a lot about, incidentally—just think of it as a five-part series; it’s structured chronologically so you can hit pause after the discussion of each individual film if you want to.

    The original Child’s Play, released in 1988, rightfully gets the biggest chunk of screen time, taking up the first 90 minutes or so. Original screenplay author Mancini and producer David Kirschner, a team that went on to become the franchise’s main architects and champions, are the most frequent talking heads, but almost everyone you’d want to hear from shows up to share their memories.

    That includes Brad Dourif (the voice of Chucky), Alex Vincent (who played the resilient six-year-old Andy Barclay), and special effects whiz Kevin Yagher, who engineered the movie’s remarkable puppets. Tom Holland, who had a not-so-harmonious experience directing Child’s Play, also chimes in, acknowledging the behind-the-scenes troubles but still making it clear he’s glad to be a part of the Child’s Play legacy.

    Don Mancini. © Courtesy of Michael Perez Entertainment LLC/Shudder

    That’s a theme that runs throughout Doc of Chucky: everyone interviewed seems thrilled to be associated with the franchise (those that aren’t, of course, presumably declined to participate—sorry to anyone hoping to hear Justin Whalin’s thoughts on Child’s Play 3 or Katherine Heigl’s on Bride of Chucky). Each film gets a similarly structured examination, starting with the Mancini-propelled ideas for what trouble Chucky could get into next, and including the particular style of each film, casting, and fun anecdotes from the set. The interviews guide us through the production (with details on how the dolls were crafted and animated) and post-production (including editing and music) processes, and break down how each entry was received both by critics and fans.

    With each success, even studio execs reluctant to throw money at a maniacal toy couldn’t deny the hunger for more Child’s Play, though Doc of Chucky also delves into what the failures along the way meant for the series. When the rushed-into-theaters third film proved a disappointment (“I fucked up,” Mancini admits), several years passed before Child’s Play took a more comedic turn with Bride of Chucky, the film that introduced Chucky’s on-and-off paramour Tiffany—as well as fan-favorite performer Jennifer Tilly.

    The result was artistically fulfilling—”I was able to let my queer freak flag fly,” Mancini recalls with glee, noting how he specifically riffed on romantic-movie tropes for the Hollywood-set tale—and, thanks to veteran Hong Kong director Ronny Yu (a delightful interviewee), it boasted sleekly elevated visuals. The campy Bride paved the way for the even more outrageous Seed of Chucky, which marked Mancini’s directorial debut as well as the introduction of Glen/Glenda, Tiffany and Chucky’s child. Their surprisingly poignant story (“a queer kid’s tense relationship with his macho dad,” per Mancini) forms the backbone of a film inspired by melodrama as well as the work of John Waters—who played a sleazy photographer in Bride, and who pops up in Doc of Chucky to emphasize his love for the Child’s Play series.

    Jennifertilly
    Jennifer Tilly. © Courtesy of Michael Perez Entertainment LLC/Shudder

    “Trash cinema is a thing that has value,” Mancini explains, and we completely agree, but Seed of Chucky—which features the infamous Chucky masturbation scene—ultimately didn’t make the desired cultural impact; its tonal shift confused audiences and critics alike. It was also, as various interviewees point out here, ahead of its time, foregrounding a trans character back in 2004. Twenty years later, it’s often cited by fans as their favorite among the series—but at the time, not everyone understood its intentions, nor its nuances.

    With cult appreciation for Bride and Seed of Chucky yet to come, it took awhile for Chucky to make his inevitable return; as the documentary explores, the two direct-to-video series entries that eventually followed, Curse of Chucky and Cult of Chucky, proved financially successful while also allowing Mancini and company to pivot again, focusing on scares over jokes. In these films, we meet Nica—played by Brad Dourif’s daughter, Fiona Dourif—a wheelchair user who holds her own against Chucky, first in a creepy old house and then a psychiatric hospital.

    Though Chucky as a character doesn’t get interviewed—understandable, since Doc of Chucky illuminates the immense effort that goes into making him come to life—we do get a good sense of how he’s evolved over the years. He’s not just a diabolical doll with a cackling laugh, though that’ll always be the backbone of his personality. He’s also a father and an occasional almost-romantic, an admirer of other sickos, and has a backstory beyond the voodoo-obsessed killer on the run we meet very briefly at the beginning of Child’s Play.

    The most important takeaway from Doc of Chucky is how the franchise has become a found family of sorts for its various participants over the years, with Mancini leading the charge. We hear about lasting friendships (and at least one decades-long marriage) that’ve resulted from the Child’s Play series. That sense of community is helped along by the fact that Mancini and Kirschner are fond of working with the same people whenever possible, in particular bringing back actors to either reprise their roles or play completely new characters in future Chucky projects.

    That includes Chucky, the series—which featured both Dourifs, Tilly, Vincent, and more—but if you’re yearning for more on the dearly departed Syfy/USA horror comedy, you won’t find it here. Neither Chucky nor the “in name only” 2019 cinematic reboot get any mention whatsoever. In the case of the latter, at least, that’s to be expected, and probably for the best.

    Doc of Chucky streams on Shudder starting tomorrow, November 1.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Chucky Has Been Cancelled, But Don Mancini Says ‘He’ll Be Back’

    Chucky Has Been Cancelled, But Don Mancini Says ‘He’ll Be Back’

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    Sad news coming late on a Friday for fans of Chucky, his signature USA/Syfy series Chucky, and horror-comedy entertainment involving diabolical, cackling, knife-wielding dolls: Don Mancini‘s show has been cancelled. That cliffhanger at the end of season three is starting to look awfully permanet—though Mancini, who first dreamed up Chucky for 1988’s Child’s Play, has an important takeaway: “He’ll be back!”

     

    Speaking to io9 ahead of Chucky‘s final season three episodes—what we now know are Chucky‘s final episodes, full stop—Mancini said he was in “very early days of talks” to make another Child’s Play movie, something fans have been dreaming of since the 2019 reboot, which did not involve Mancini or the distinctive vocal stylings of Brad Dourif (sorry, Mark Hamill, but you shouldn’t have). Mancini’s last Chucky movie was 2017’s Cult of Chucky; the TV show premiered in 2021.

    “[A new movie would be an] exciting, exciting enterprise,” Mancini told io9 earlier this year. “I hope we’re going to get another season of the show as well. I mean, I think both [the movie and the show] can occur and they can both coexist in there. My plan is to have it all make sense in terms of the continuity and the overall mythology of the world we’re building; we won’t contradict anything.”

    When asked if a new movie would carry on the plot of the TV show, Mancini said, “Or it could be, if we get a season four, we pick up those story threads. And wherever we end up leaving off season four, that the movie could take over. I can’t say too much because there’s actually an even trickier way that it works that makes it kind of cool. I know you have to take that with a huge grain of salt coming from me. It’s like I can’t say anything, but it’s really amazing.”

    With no season four in the works, here’s hoping that movie idea is still coming alone. The Deadline article linked in Mancini’s tweet shared a statement from the creator: “I’m heartbroken over the news that Chucky won’t be coming back for a fourth season, but am so grateful for the killer three years we did have. I’d like to thank UCP/Syfy/Peacock/Eat the Cat, our awesome cast and Toronto-based crew (the best in the business), and finally, to our amazing fans, a big bloody hug. Your incredible #RenewChucky campaign really warmed Chucky’s cold heart. Chucky will return! He ALWAYS come back.”

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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