Of course I’ve seen Child’s Play before—what kind of poser do you think I am? But that was back before I started blogging. After writing a post about Puppet Master, I thought I should watch it again because it didn’t really strike me as memorable the first time around. Probably the reason for that is I knew the basics of the story before I saw the movie and, like zombies, possessed dolls are a little hard to buy into. Still, on this second viewing I was a bit more impressed. The idea of the monster that won’t stop coming is a scary one, and I’d forgotten just how much Chucky had to be dismembered before being stopped. And there are some legitimately scary scenes, despite unanswered questions. In case you’re not familiar: criminal Charles Lee Ray is shot to death in a toy store, but not before transferring his soul, through voodoo, into a Good Guy doll. This doll is bought on the black market by a widow who can’t afford one, for her son’s birthday.
Chucky befriends the boy but starts taking revenge on those who’ve wronged him, including the police officer called to investigate his first murder. The officer happens to be the one that shot Ray at the beginning of the film. Nobody believes that the doll is alive until it attacks them personally. Nobody, that is, except Andy, the six-year-old owner of Chucky. (Although it isn’t cited as such, I have to wonder if Toy Story’s Andy wasn’t actually based on this one; that’s not the official story, but still…) Child’s Play wasn’t the first horror film to portray an animated doll, but it was perhaps the most influential. Chucky went on to become a repeat slasher villain with wide recognition.
I’d completely forgotten the appropriation of voodoo as the animating force behind Chucky. Of course, that leads to the very obvious weirdness of a doll using a voodoo doll to kill someone. To modern sensitivities, the use of Vodou feels inappropriate, but this was in the eighties, and other religions were fair game for horror. In fact, religion was fair game. Without it, no animated Chucky, and no threat to Andy and his mother. Religion and horror have played together from the very beginning. The possession aspect also ties into religion and there have been no end of possessed dolls since Chucky first lunged out the screen with his knife. It was a good play date, it turns out.

