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Child's Play 3
File:Childsplay3.jpg
Theatrical poster
Directed byJack Bender
Written byDon Mancini
Produced byRobert Latham Brown
Starring
  • Justin Whalin
  • Perrey Reeves
  • Jeremy Sylvers
CinematographyJohn R. Leonetti
Edited by
  • Scott Wallace
  • Edward A. Warschilka Jr.
Music by
  • Cory Lerios
  • John D'Andrea
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • August 30, 1991 (1991-08-30)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$20.5 million


Child's Play 3 is a 1991 American supernatural slasher film. It is the third installment in the Child's Play series, with Brad Dourif returning as the voice of Chucky. Although released only one year later, the story takes place eight years following the events of 1990's Child's Play 2. It was executive produced by David Kirschner.

The film became notorious in the United Kingdom when it was suggested it might have inspired the real-life murder of British child James Bulger, a suggestion rejected by officers investigating the case,[1][2] and the murder of Suzanne Capper.[3] The film was followed by Bride of Chucky.

File:Justin Whalin at WonderCon 2009.JPG

Justin Whalin portrays a grown-up Andy Barclay in Child's Play 3

Plot[]

In 1998, eight years after the previous film, The Play Pals (Good Guys) has recovered from bad publicity brought along by Chucky's (voiced by Brad Dourif) murder spree. The company releases a new line of Good Guy dolls and recycles Chucky's remains. However, the soul of serial killer Charles Lee Ray still inhabits the remains, and Chucky is soon revived. Chucky is unwittingly given to Play Pals' CEO Mr. Sullivan, whom he kills. He then uses computer records to relocate Andy Barclay (Alex Vincent).

Still troubled by his past encounters with Chucky, 16-year-old Andy Barclay (Justin Whalin) has been sent to Kent Military Academy after having failed to cope in several foster homes (due to Andy's mother still being in a mental hospital). Colonel Cochran (Dakin Matthews), the school's commandant, begrudgingly enrolls Andy, but advises him to forget his "fantasies" about the doll. Andy befriends cadets Harold Aubrey Whitehurst (Dean Jacobson), Ronald Tyler (Jeremy Sylvers), and Kristin DeSilva (Perrey Reeves), for whom he develops romantic feelings. He also meets Brett C. Shelton (Travis Fine), a lieutenant colonel who routinely bullies the cadets, especially Andy.

Shortly after Andy arrives, Tyler is asked to deliver a package to his room. Tyler realizes that the package contains a Good Guy doll and, excited, takes it to the cellar to open it, only to have Chucky burst free from the package. Remembering the rule that he can possess the first person who learns his true nature (and that with a new body, it need not be Andy) he tells Tyler his secret, but just as Chucky is about to possess him, they are interrupted by Cochran who takes the doll away. Cochran throws Chucky into a garbage truck, but Chucky escapes by luring the driver into the truck's compactor and crushing him. That night, Chucky attacks Andy and tells him his plans for taking over Tyler's soul. Before Andy can attack Chucky, Shelton comes in and takes the doll from him. Andy tries to get the doll back by sneaking into Shelton's room, but Shelton catches him in the act. Upon realizing the doll has vanished, Shelton suspects it stolen and forces all the cadets to do exercises in the courtyard as punishment.

Andy unsuccessfully tries to warn Tyler about Chucky. At one point, Chucky lures Tyler into playing hide-and-seek in Cochran's office, where he attempts to possess the boy again. However, they are interrupted by De Silva and, moments later, Cochran himself. When the cadets leave, Cochran is suddenly confronted by a knife-wielding Chucky. The resulting shock causes Cochran to suffer a fatal heart attack. Chucky later kills the cruel camp barber Sergeant Botnick (Andrew Robinson) by slashing his neck with a razor.

Despite Cochran's death, Sgt. Clark declares that the school's annual war games will proceed as planned, with Andy and Shelton on the same team. However, Chucky secretly replaces the blank paint bullets of the Red team with live ammunition. When the simulation begins, Chucky accosts Tyler, then threatens the boy when he refuses to take part. Tyler stabs Chucky with a pocket knife and flees, trying to find Andy. Chucky then attacks Kristin and holds her hostage, attempting to lure the teams into fighting each other to save her. Chucky forces Andy to exchange Kristin for Tyler.

Suddenly, the Red team descends upon the area and obliviously opens fire with their live rounds, with Shelton being killed in the crossfire. Amidst the chaos, Tyler makes a quick getaway, but before giving chase, Chucky tosses a live grenade at the quarreling cadets. Recognizing the danger, Whitehurst bravely leaps on top of the grenade and sacrifices himself to save the others. With no time to mourn his friend, Andy heads off in pursuit of Chucky, with Kristin close behind.

Eventually the chase leads the group into a fake haunted house at a nearby carnival. Tyler tries to get a security guard to help him, but Chucky kills the guard offscreen and kidnaps Tyler. In the ensuing melee, Chucky shoots Kristin in the leg, leaving Andy to fight Chucky alone. When Tyler is inadvertently knocked out, Chucky seizes the opportunity to possess him, but Andy intervenes, shooting him several times. Enraged, Chucky attempts to strangle Andy, but Andy uses Tyler's knife to cut off Chucky's hand, dropping him into a giant fan which mutilates him. Afterwards, Andy is taken away by the police for questioning, while Kristin is rushed to the nearby hospital. Tyler's fate is left unknown.

Cast[]

  • Brad Dourif as Chucky (Voice)
  • Justin Whalin as Andy Barclay
  • Perrey Reeves as Kristin De Silva
  • Jeremy Sylvers as Ronald Tyler
  • Andrew Robinson as Sgt. Botnick
  • Travis Fine as Cadet Lt. Col. Brett C. Shelton
  • Dakin Matthews as Col. Cochrane
  • Donna Eskra as J. Ivers
  • Burke Byrnes as Sgt. Clark
  • Matthew Walker as Maj. Ellis
  • Dean Jacobson as Harold Aubrey Whitehurst
  • Peter Haskell as Mr. Sullivan
  • Alex Vincent as Younger Andy Barclay (archive footage; uncredited during the first part of the movie)

Novelization[]

A tie-in novel was later written by Matthew J. Costello. Just like Child's Play 2, this novel had some of the author's own parts. In the beginning (unlike the film's), in the Play Pals factory, a rat scours for food and chews on Chucky's remains. Blood then leaks out of the remains and somehow leaks into another doll. Chucky's death in this book is also different. In the novel, Andy shoots Chucky in the chest and causes his body to fall to the floor, and watches his head shatter to blood, metal and plastic.

Release[]

Child's Play 3 opened in second place behind Dead Again to $5.7 million over the 4-day 1991 Labor Day weekend, which the Los Angeles Times called "slow numbers".[4] It finished its theatrical run with $15 million in the US, and a total of $20.5 million worldwide.[5]

Reception[]

Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 23% of 13 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 3.9/10.[6] Chris Hicks of the Deseret News called it "perverse" and criticized the film's plot.[7] Caryn James of The New York Times called the Chucky doll "an impressive technological achievement" but said the film "misses the sharpness and dark humor" of the original film.[8] Variety called it a "noisy, mindless sequel" with good acting.[9] Richard Harrington of The Washington Post wrote, "Chucky himself is an animatronic delight, but one suspects the film's energies and budget have all been devoted to what is essentially a one-trick pony."[10] Stephen Wigle of The Baltimore Sun called it "fun for any fan of the slasher genre".[11] Series creator Don Mancini said that this was his least favorite entry in the series, adding that he ran out of ideas after the second film.[12] Mancini would not make another entry in the Chucky series until seven years later, with Bride of Chucky.

Awards[]

List of awards and nominations
Award Category Winner/Nominee Result
Saturn Award Best Horror Film Child's Play 3 Nominated
Best Performance by a Younger Actor Justin Whalin Nominated
Fangoria Chainsaw Award Best Supporting Actor Andrew Robinson Nominated

Home video releases[]

Child's Play 3 was originally released on home video in North America on March 12, 1992,[citation needed] and on DVD in 2003. Child's Play 3 was also released in the Chucky Collection (which also featured Child's Play 2, and Bride of Chucky) on October 7, 2003.[13] On September 19, 2006, it was released as part of Chucky - The Killer DVD Collection (alongside Child's Play 2, Bride of Chucky, and Seed of Chucky).[14] On October 8, 2013, Child's Play 3 was re-released on DVD and Blu-ray as part of Chucky: The Complete Collection (alongside the original Child's Play, Child's Play 2, Bride of Chucky, Seed of Chucky, and Curse of Chucky).[15]

James Bulger controversy[]

The film also had some controversy because it has been indirectly linked to the brutal United Kingdom murder of James Bulger. The killers, who were 10 years old at the time, were said to have imitated a scene in which one of Chucky's victims is splashed with blue paint. Although these allegations against the film have never been proven, the case has led to some new legislation for video films.[16] Psychologist Guy Cumberbatch has stated, "The link with a video was that the father of one of the boys – Jon Venables – had rented Child's Play 3: Look Who's Stalking some months earlier."[17] However, the police officer who directed the investigation, Albert Kirby, found that the son, Jon, was not living with his father at the time and was unlikely to have seen the film. Moreover, the boy disliked horror films—a point later confirmed by psychiatric reports. Thus the police investigation, which had specifically looked for a video link, concluded there was none.[18]

Sequel[]

Mancini originally intended for this film to be the final installment in the series, however following the success of Scream, five years later; interest in the slasher subgenre was revived and a sequel was then planned and released seven years after the third film in 1998 with the title "Bride of Chucky". Unlike its predecessors, Bride of Chucky was a horror-comedy and made Chucky the main character and gave him a girlfriend and changed the plot from trying to take a child's soul to him and his girlfriend going after his amulet which was buried with his human corpse. Unlike in the previous three films, the protagonist Andy Barclay made no appearance but was briefly mentioned at the beginning of the film in a newspaper article about Chucky. Bride of Chucky was then followed by two sequels; Seed of Chucky in 2004 and Curse of Chucky in 2013, the latter of which returned to the straightforward horror elements found in the first three films and also brought back Andy Barclay, the protagonist from the first three films for a quick post-credits cameo role. A seventh installment is also planned and scheduled for release in October 2017, called Cult of Chucky, which brings back the original protagist Andy Barclay, despite having a cameo in a post-credits scene in Curse of Chucky.

Halloween Horror Nights[]

In 2009, the climax of Child's Play 3 received its own maze at Universal Studios Halloween Horror Nights, entitled Chucky's Fun House.

This is not the first time Chucky has been featured in Halloween Horror Nights. Curse of Chucky has been slated to receive its own scarezone in the 2013 lineup.[19] Since 1992, Chucky has starred in his own shows, Chucky's In-Your-Face Insults and Chucky's Insult Emporium.

See also[]

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  • Dolly Dearest, another 1991 horror movie about a killer doll released two months after Child's Play 3.

References[]

  1. "No conclusive link between videos and violence". BBC. 1998-01-07. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
  2. Kirby, Terry; Foster, Jonathan (1993-11-26). "Video link to Bulger murder disputed". The Independent. London. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
  3. Thompson, Kenneth (2005). Moral Panics. Routledge. p. 100. ISBN 9781134811625.
  4. Fox, David J. (1991-09-04). "Weekend Box Office : 'Dead' Enlivens Labor Day Business". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
  5. "Child's Play 3". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2015-08-23.
  6. "Child's Play 3 (1991)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2015-08-23.
  7. "Child's Play 3". Deseret News. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
  8. James, Caryn (1991-08-30). "Child's Play 3". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
  9. "Child's Play 3". Variety. 1990-12-31. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
  10. Harrington, Richard (1991-08-30). "'Child's Play 3'". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2015-08-23.
  11. Wigle, Stephen (1991-08-30). "'Child's Play 3': Chucky's back--more amusing and disturbing than ever". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  12. Zupan, Michael (2013-10-11). "Chucky: The Complete Collection (Blu-ray)". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2015-08-23.
  13. Goldman, Eric (2006-09-08). "Double Dip Digest: Child's Play". IGN. Retrieved 2016-01-17.
  14. Jane, Ian (2006-09-21). "Chucky: The Killer DVD Collection". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2016-01-17.
  15. Zupan, Michael (2013-10-11). "Chucky: The Complete Collection (Blu-ray)". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2016-01-17.
  16. Morrison, Blake (2003-02-06). "Life after James". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
  17. Faux, Ronald; Frost, Bill (1993-11-25). "Boys guilty of Bulger murder". The Times. London. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
  18. Bracchi, Paul (2010-03-13). "The police were sure James Bulger's ten-year-old killers were simply wicked. But should their parents have been in the dock?". Daily Mail. London. Retrieved 2011-04-21.
  19. http://www.fearnet.com/news/news-article/universal-studios-halloween-horror-nights-introduces-chucky-and-purge-scarezones

External links[]

Template:Child's Play Template:Jack Bender

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