The original Child’s Play landed in theaters in 1988, delivering audiences an unexpected slasher about a murderer who used a voodoo ritual to inject his spirit into the body of a child’s doll. Following franchises like Halloween, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and Friday the 13th and their depictions of intimidating presences, Child’s Play‘s Chucky circumvented expectations and became a major horror sensation. While that original film earned six sequels, a new reboot is landing in theaters this weekend that hopes to revive interest in the premise. With the first reviews making their way online, reactions are somewhat mixed, noting that, while the film has its own merits, the film likely would have fared better without the recognizable name.
The new film from director Lars Klevberg abandons the supernatural components of the mythology, instead focusing on malfunctioning artificial intelligence, resulting in a toy going haywire and creating chaos. As reviews come in, critics are noting that the film leans into the campiness of the premise and, while the horror elements might not be as effective, there is still plenty of blood and gore on display.
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Scroll down to see what critics are saying about Child’s Play before it lands in theaters this weekend!
Ben Kenigsberg – New York Times
“In effect, the director Lars Klevberg has delivered a platonic rehash of Fatal Attraction, with a three-foot hunk of plastic in the Glenn Close role. Chucky gets his voice from Mark Hamill, a distinguished vocal actor when not on Jedi duties, which are presumably more fun. This revamped Chucky has a sense of humor, of sorts. He learns his slashing skills from watching the second Texas Chainsaw Massacreย and spouts one-liners like ‘this is for Tupac’ย as he stabs. (That reference, like much of the movie, feels way out of date.)”
You can read the full review here.
Christian Holub – Entertainment Weekly
“The bigger change is thatย Child’s Playย tries to make Chucky’s evil understandable, relatable even. There is a sequence of events, starting with the Vietnamese worker’s sabotage and continuing through the behaviors Chucky observes from Andy and others, that explains how Chucky comes to commit such violence. But one of the main reasons Dourif’s Chucky was so terrifying was that he was just a relentless, unstoppable psychopath. By giving Chucky a reason to kill, the new movie’s arc can’t help but dilute his menace a bit.”
You can read the full review here.
Keith Uhlich – Hollywood Reporter
“Thisย Child’s Playย puts a lot of stock in the notion of AI run amok โ hardly a new conceit, though one that at least affords some giddily gruesome business during the film’s discount-store climax, as Chucky uses his connection to the cloud to make other Buddis do his savage bidding.ย Nothing on display here beatsย Bride of Chucky‘s doll-on-doll sex scene, of course, nor that marvelous moment in the firstย Child’s Playย when Chucky’s goody-goody expression drops, he hurls some choice invective at poor Catherine Hicks and then exits the sceneย Trilogy of Terrorย style. The makeshift nature of [original writer Don] Mancini’s originals handily outshines this slick, corporate cash-grab. I’ll still giveย Child’s Playย redux this: best end-credits song sinceย Gran Torino.“
You can read the full review here.
Peter Debruge – Variety
“Despite all these upgrades, Chucky actually seems less intimidating than before. Part of this can be blamed on the ugly new character design, although he’s really hamstrung by the inevitable limits of an animatronic character’s performance. While the eyes are the only feature that appear to be computer generated, the facial expressions can be confusing, relying on the score to cue us what Chucky is ‘thinking.’ But when you get down to it, his personality isn’t all that interesting anymore. At least the fact the film doesn’t take itself too seriously can make Child’s Play fun to laugh at โ a kind of good-bad movie experience that’s nowhere near as entertaining as that recent Black Mirrorย episode where Miley Cyrus plays a pop star with a dangerous tie-in toy.”
You can read the full review here.
Scott Mendelson – Forbes
“Without overselling it, this is still just a solid three-star horror flick, Child’s Play is a platonic ideal for a horror remake. It does its own thing and provides entertainment value both connected to and divorced from its source material. It features strong actors and an emphasis on character over plot even amid the violence. Combined with decent production values and a polished palette, this Child’s Play remake is good enough and different enough from what came before to justify its inclusion among the ‘traditional’ Don Mancini movies. Chucky got lucky, because this Child’s Play remake is pretty good, and it’ll make a fine double bill with your favorite Child’s Play sequel.”
You can read the full review here.
Chris Hewitt – Empire Magazine
“The chief issue is in the reimagining of Chucky himself as a robot doll. Removing the supernatural possession element that powered the original is all well and good, and there are nice ideas about Chucky being able to link up with the cloud and other devices, but they’re never fully explored. More fatally, what we have here is a film populated by people so dense that they don’t take the batteries out of the doll the second it malfunctions. And when that happens, the film soon malfunctions with it.”
You can read the full review here.
Meagan Navarro – Consequence of Sound
“Child’s Play is pure entertaining fun for the horror fan, but it’s also not much else. It doesn’t reinvent the wheel, nor does it offer much depth, particularly with its characters. While the cast is amiable enough, they’re mostly surface-level archetypes. Karen is a struggling single mom with bad taste in men, clearly loves her son, and has trouble believing his doll is evil. Andy is the typical sweet outcast, whose hearing aid serves more as an exploit for Chucky than any kind of character point. Elsewhere, there’s the friendly detective, the sleazy boyfriend, and even the tough girl next door. None of them come close to swaying our allegiance away from Chucky.”
You can read the full review here.
Erc Kohn – IndieWire
“Child’s Playย is less self-aware than rote, and even its critical gaze feels half-baked. From the Unfriendedย series to Like Me, genre movies about the eeriness of the online era have gone deeper, scarier, and had more fun with the creative possibilities that 21st-century technology provide. (Jim Jarmusch’s recent Dead Don’t Dieย might be blunt in its allegories, but the image of zombies carrying functional cell phones is more potent than anything Klevberg offers up.) Child’s Playย at once repudiates Mancini’s franchise by attempting to make it bigger and bolder while falling back on ingredients we’ve seen before, and seen better. While it sets out to skewer the algorithms that could destroy the world, the remake hews to a mechanical formula โ and winds up a product of the same tendencies it’s trying to indict.”
You can read the full review here.