Nica (Fiona Dourif), who is in a wheelchair due to a condition she was born with, lives in an old house with her mother. When her mother is brutally murdered, Nica's sister, Barb (Danielle Bisutti of Insidious Chapter Two), suggests she go to a special home and they sell the place, as she and husband Ian (Brennan Elliott) need the money. Ian doesn't know it, but Barb is having an affair with their daughter, Alice's, nanny, Jill (Maitland McConnell). Nica comes to realize that there may be something strange and sinister about little Alice's doll, Chucky. The family priest (A Martinez) is killed in a grisly auto accident, then other people in the old house also start dying as Chucky -- or rather serial killer Charles Lee Ray (Brad Dourif) -- gets his long-awaited revenge on the family.
Curse of Chucky is better than the Child's Play sequels, including Bride of Chucky and Seed of Chucky. For the most part Curse eschews the camp approach of the other Chucky flicks until the very end when -- alas -- Jennifer Tilly shows up again. Until then, Curse is suspenseful and creepy. Some of the gore is overdone, of course -- far too many modern-day horror directors rely too much on blood and guts instead of building suspense -- but Curse delivers some of the scares and creepiness that true horror fans enjoy. The acting in this is also very good -- Fiona Dourif is the daughter of Brad Dourif, and eventually she would sort of play Charles Lee Ray; Father Dourif's voice acting is excellent. The cinematography (Michael Marshall) and music (Joseph LoDuca) are also top-notch.
Verdict: Little Chucky has a pretty good vehicle in this. ***.
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