The Child’s Play franchise introduced a new type of slasher that was unlike anything seen before. In the past, Michael Myers and Jason Voorhees introduced the idea that an effective killer needed strength and drive to properly kill a victim. Years later, Freddy Krueger appeared and showed that strength was nothing compared to the supernatural ability to invade a victim’s dreams. Through fear, anything could be achieved, and while these killers proved that, Child’s Play showed that there was another option. Through voodoo, a killer transferred his soul into a doll and began taking lives in hopes of finding a body he could live in.The body chosen was a young boy named Andy Barclay, who became the focal point of the Child’s Play trilogy as he was forced to endure the violent truths of life thanks to Chucky’s actions. To make matters worse, many believed Andy was the killer as that was easier to believe than a killer doll. But this concept, while successful, wasn’t the original idea, as it was revealed by the movie’s creators that Child’s Play initially wanted Andy to be an unlikely cause of Chucky’s violent rampage.When Andy and Chucky first met, the young boy was forced to shoulder the trauma of seeing those he cared about killed in front of him. The worst part was when Andy tried to tell the truth, no one believed him, which created a perfect scenario where Chucky could constantly kill, and no one would assume a thing. By Child’s Play 2, Chucky’s revival meant he could torture Andy further, leading him to kill his teacher and foster family in a desperate bid to inhabit Andy’s body and control him. Child’s Play 3 finally had Andy overcome his tormentor, but the damage was done as the reputation of his past never left him and forced him to always look over his shoulder just in case Chucky returned.RELATED: Talk to Me Pulls From a Famous Philosopher for Its Demonic Plot
The Child’s Play franchise introduced a new type of slasher that was unlike anything seen before. In the past, Michael Myers and Jason Voorhees introduced the idea that an effective killer needed strength and drive to properly kill a victim. Years later, Freddy Krueger appeared and showed that strength was nothing compared to the supernatural ability to invade a victim’s dreams. Through fear, anything could be achieved, and while these killers proved that, Child’s Play showed that there was another option. Through voodoo, a killer transferred his soul into a doll and began taking lives in hopes of finding a body he could live in.
The body chosen was a young boy named Andy Barclay, who became the focal point of the Child’s Play trilogy as he was forced to endure the violent truths of life thanks to Chucky’s actions. To make matters worse, many believed Andy was the killer as that was easier to believe than a killer doll. But this concept, while successful, wasn’t the original idea, as it was revealed by the movie’s creators that Child’s Play initially wanted Andy to be an unlikely cause of Chucky’s violent rampage.
When Andy and Chucky first met, the young boy was forced to shoulder the trauma of seeing those he cared about killed in front of him. The worst part was when Andy tried to tell the truth, no one believed him, which created a perfect scenario where Chucky could constantly kill, and no one would assume a thing. By Child’s Play 2, Chucky’s revival meant he could torture Andy further, leading him to kill his teacher and foster family in a desperate bid to inhabit Andy’s body and control him. Child’s Play 3 finally had Andy overcome his tormentor, but the damage was done as the reputation of his past never left him and forced him to always look over his shoulder just in case Chucky returned.
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