Child's Play | |
Director: | Lars Klevberg |
Screenplay: | Tyler Burton Smith |
Music: | Bear McCreary |
Cinematography: | Brendan Uegama |
Editing: | Tom Elkins |
Runtime: | 90 minutes[1] |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $10 million[2] |
Gross: | $44.9 million |
Child's Play is a 2019 horror film directed by Lars Klevberg from a screenplay written by Tyler Burton Smith. Serving both as a remake of the 1988 eponymous film and a reboot of the Child's Play franchise, the film stars Aubrey Plaza, Gabriel Bateman, Brian Tyree Henry, and Mark Hamill as the voice of Chucky. It follows a family terrorized by a high-tech doll who develops self-awareness and becomes subsequently hostile and murderous.
Plans for a Child's Play remake began in the early 2010s, with original Chucky voice actor Brad Dourif set to reprise the role. However, it was turned down and the project entered development hell. By 2018, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer announced a remake with a different creative team than the original film series. Klevberg signed on as director from a script by Burton Smith, saying in an interview he drew inspiration from the 1982 science fiction film, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial. Principal photography for the film began in September 2018 and wrapped in November in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Child's Play premiered in Paris on June 18, 2019, before being theatrically released in the United States and Canada three days later by Orion Pictures through United Artists Releasing and Elevation Pictures respectively. The film grossed $44.9 million worldwide against a $10 million budget and received mixed reviews from critics, with the Rotten Tomatoes' consensus calling it "predictably gruesome" and "generally entertaining".
Multinational Kaslan Corporation has just launched Buddi, a revolutionary line of high-tech dolls designed to be lifelong companions to their owners, learning from their surroundings, and acting accordingly via artificial intelligence. It quickly becomes a worldwide success. At a Kaslan assembly factory in Vietnam, an overworked employee is verbally abused by his supervisor. In retaliation, he sabotages a Buddi doll by disabling all of its safety protocols before committing suicide.
In Chicago, widowed retail clerk Karen Barclay and her twelve-year-old hearing-impaired son Andy have moved into a new apartment. In an attempt to cheer Andy up about the relocation and the presence of her new boyfriend Shane, Karen blackmails her boss to procure a defective Buddi doll; it is revealed to be the tampered one. Once activated, the doll names himself "Chucky" and becomes attached to Andy. Chucky helps him befriend two other children but also begins to display violent tendencies.
One morning, Andy arrives home to finds that his cat Rooney is dead. Chucky killed it after the cat previously scratched Andy. Chucky next terrorizes Shane, which leads Shane to rudely confront Andy. Misunderstanding Andy's pleas for Shane to disappear, Chucky follows the man home, where it is revealed that he is in fact married with children. There, Chucky breaks Shane's legs and activates a cultivator that scalps and kills him. He delivers Shane's skinned face as a gift to a horrified Andy.
As Andy's neighbor, police detective Mike Norris, begins an investigation, Andy and his friends disable Chucky and throw him into the garbage. Voyeur electrician Gabe finds and fixes the doll. Chucky kills Gabe, then Norris' mother Doreen. Meanwhile, Andy fails to convince Karen that the doll has become murderous. She takes him along to her job at the shopping mall to keep an eye on him. Suspecting that Andy is responsible for the murders, Norris arrests him just as Chucky takes full control of the building and its other Buddi toys.
Chaos is unleashed as employees and customers are brutally killed by rampaging Buddi dolls. Norris is wounded and Andy and his friends escape. However, Andy is forced to return when Chucky holds Karen hostage. He saves his mother before Norris shoots the doll down and Karen beheads him, both realizing Andy was telling the truth. Andy and his friends later burn Chucky's body.
In the aftermath, Kaslan CEO Henry Kaslan announces a Buddi dolls recall. As one of the dolls is placed into storage, his eyes flicker red and he smiles, revealing that Chucky transferred his artificial intelligence into a new body.
In the early 2010s, before Curse of Chucky started its development, a planned remake for the original 1988 Child's Play was announced, with Brad Dourif set to reprise his role as Chucky. There is not much information about the remake, but it was subsequently cancelled. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer announced the development of a Child's Play remake in July 2018, with a different creative team than the original film series.[3]
Polaroid director Lars Klevberg signed on, with a script by Tyler Burton Smith, following his work in Quantum Break. It and It Chapter Two collaborative team Seth Grahame-Smith and David Katzenberg served as producers.[4] Gabriel Bateman, Aubrey Plaza, and Brian Tyree Henry were announced to star in September,[5] [6] followed by Ty Consiglio and Beatrice Kitsos in November.[7] Mark Hamill was cast to voice Chucky, replacing Dourif.[8] Grahame-Smith elaborated on Hamill's casting in an interview with Entertainment Weekly:Principal photography began on September 17 and wrapped on November 8, 2018, in Vancouver, Canada.[9] Reshoots occurred on December 15–16 and in April 2019.[10] [11] MastersFX, a visual effects company, took six weeks to prepare and assemble seven practical animatronic puppets, each with interchangeable arms and heads that performed a variety of required actions on set,[12] with some help from Pixomondo, who provided the CGI for the film.[13] Bear McCreary composed the score through a "toy orchestra" inspired by "Chucky's toy-store origins" with toy pianos, hurdy-gurdies, accordions, plastic guitars and otamatones.[14] The soundtrack was released by Waxwork Records on vinyl which featured liner notes by the composer.[15]
The first official image of Chucky was released on September 29, 2018.[16] The teaser poster was released on November 12, revealing that for the film's adaptation the Good Guys dolls would be called Buddy referencing the My Buddy doll that influenced the original character's design.[17] A WiFi symbol over the "i" in "Buddi" teases the character's hi-tech functions, being similar to robot toys, such as Furby and RoboSapien.[18] Orion Pictures launched a marketing website for the fictional Kaslan Corporation, ahead of the film's release.[19] The first trailer premiered on February 8, 2019, with the release of The Prodigy.[20]
The film's theatrical poster and a second trailer were released in April 2019.[21] A behind-the-scenes video was uploaded to Orion Pictures' YouTube channel on May 16, which shows how Chucky was brought to life for the film.[22] [23] Beginning in April, several posters alluding to Toy Story 4 were released, featuring Chucky brutally killing characters of the animated franchise, using the Toy Story 4s teaser posters' background. Both films had June 21, 2019 releases.[24] [25] [26] [27] On June 24, a poster was unveiled to coincide with the release of Annabelle Comes Home, featuring Chucky killing the Annabelle doll.[28]
The film was released in the United States on June 21, 2019.[29] [17] It is the first film from Orion Pictures to be released through United Artists Releasing.[30]
The film was released digitally on September 10, and on Blu-ray and DVD on September 24 by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment.[31]
Child's Play grossed $29.2 million in the United States and Canada, and $15.8 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $44.9 million, against a production budget of $10 million.[2]
In the United States and Canada, Child's Play was released alongside Toy Story 4 and Anna, and was projected to gross $16–18 million from 3,007 theaters in its opening weekend.[32] It made $6.1 million on its first day, including $1.65 million from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut to $14.1 million, and finished second, behind Toy Story 4.[33] The film dropped 68.6% in its second weekend to $4.4 million, falling to eighth.[34]
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of based on reviews, with an average rating of . The site's critical consensus reads: "Child's Play updates an '80s horror icon for the Internet of Things era, with predictably gruesome – and generally entertaining – results."[35] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 48 out of 100, based on 35 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[36] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "C+" on an A+ to F scale, tied with Seed of Chucky for the lowest score of the series.
Nick Allen of RogerEbert.com gave the film three out of four stars, calling it "nastier, more playful, and just as good if not better than the original film."[37] Peter Bradshaw from The Guardian gave the film a positive review, with 4/5 stars, calling it a "razor-sharp and exquisitely gruesome toy story".[38] Jeremy Dick from MovieWeb also liked the film, writing "Child's Play is the lowest horror movie remake and should now serve as a prime example of what others should do. It's highly entertaining and tons of fun, and I say that as a huge fan of the original."[39]
Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the film 2 out of 5 stars, writing, "MIA is the original's perverse originality... in a misguided satire of the digital era and millennial consumerism".[40] Varietys Peter Debruge was also negative, stating, "This is the new normal for horror movies: The screenplays have to seem hipper than the premise they represent, which puts Child's Play in the weird position of pointing out and poking fun at all the ways it fails to make sense."[41]
At WonderCon, Grahame-Smith said that if the film does well, they would love to make a sequel.[42] Director Lars Klevberg discussed his ideas for a possible sequel.
In July 2020, Klevberg said he would love to make a sequel, but due to Don Mancini creating the Chucky television series, it was unlikely.[43]