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Nica was very painful about the suicide of his mother and Barb, her sister, had moved with his family to care for her. As worrying about Nica that Barb did not pay attention to his youngest daughter playing and talk with one doll named Chucky. Next was a series of gruesome murders occuring within the family and Nica believed that the doll had caused. But she did not know that Chucky had a debt of its own, and it would manage to complete its work 20 years ago.
Curse can't shake its groggy DTV presentation, feeling like a cheap experiment to see if the faithful will follow the series now that theatrical demand has passed.
There's nothing here to indicate that the current iteration of Chucky contains enough life to stalk though anything more than a string of middling direct-to-video sequels.
Despite the return of Brad Douriff as the voice of Chucky and writer-director Don Mancini, this installment lacks the humor or thrills of the films that went before.
By grounding the film in a haunted house-style horror movie and making Chucky a creepy doll again, while still maintaining the warped humor that the first three films had, it may deliver the best film in the franchise.
The Child's Play franchise...makes a surprising, successful reversal with Curse Of Chucky, the franchise's serious-minded, at times even dour fifth sequel.
Curse Of Chucky is a vicious return to form for one of horror's most legendary icons, terrorizing victims in the purest, darkest form of criminal insanity.