All 8 Child’s Play (Chucky) Movies, Ranked from Worst to Best

The idea of a “killer doll” wasn’t exactly an unexplored thought when Child’s Play arrived in 1988. Surely, there were some fans in the audience who immediately thought back to the likes of “Talky Tina” on The Twilight Zone …or any of the several other episodes of that series that also dealt with dolls or dummies come to life. Although the concept had been broached before, none of those other dolls had a personality half as large as that of Charles Lee Ray. That’s “Chucky” to his friends.
Child’s Play was a series that fascinated people. Even viewers with no knowledge of the slasher genre—running out of gas and short on ideas by 1988, if we’re being honest—were drawn to the concept of a foul-mouthed little doll empowered by voodoo magic, blood lust and Brad Dourif’s manic voice. I can vividly remember grade school lunch conversations about the series in the early ’90s, held between groups of children collectively lying to each other about having seen “those Chucky movies.” Even though we didn’t know what we were talking about, Child’s Play stood out as some kind of cinematic forbidden fruit. The VHS covers are burned into my memory, after seeing them during every Blockbuster Video excursion.
Nor has the series gone through what you might call a typical franchise trajectory. After burning out in theatrical releases in the 2000s, one would naturally have expected Child’s Play to be more or less gone from the cultural discourse by this point. And yet the films actually managed to improve during their straight-to-video and VOD era, leading to renewed interest and the release of a modern remake, this one starring the voice of none other than Mark Hamill. At the same time, there’s also the surprisingly well-received new Syfy TV series, simply titled Chucky.
Now is the time, then, to reexamine the entire Child’s Play series, and put every Chucky outing in its place—including the remake. Here they are, from worst to best.
8. Seed of Chucky (2004)Director: Don Mancini
Of all the entries in the Child’s Play series, Seed of Chucky had perhaps the shakiest foundation from the start. It’s burdened by its direct connection to the similarly weak Bride of Chucky, and completes that film’s abandonment of any attempt at making a legitimate horror film. Also: I can barely bring myself to look at the face of Chucky’s progeny, Glen—I don’t know what it is about that doll, but it’s so aesthetically unpleasant that it triggers genuine revulsion, and not in a genre-appropriate way. This thing is plain ugly, and I hate it with a not entirely rational bitterness.
Seed of Chucky plays out almost like two films, both of which are different flavors of comedy. One is an occasionally amusing, meta-winking Hollywood farce that sees Jennifer Tilly playing “herself,” attempting to land a part playing the Virgin Mary through use of sex. The other sees Chucky and his doll wife Tiffany (also voiced by Tilly) brought back from the dead only to bicker about how to raise their emotionally and sexually confused offspring. The film’s got some fun, insider Hollywood gags, including a number of references to the filmographies of Ed Wood and John Waters, but Seed of Chucky falls flat on its face at any point when it has to revisit any kind of “horror” bonafides. It feels tired, lazy and endlessly self-referential, like a confession that Mancini had no interesting avenues left to explore with the character. It’s telling that this is the least charismatic of all the performances by Brad Dourif as Chucky—it just seems like his heart isn’t in it at this point, and his presence is curiously absent from the film, despite it bearing his name. A subplot about Chucky not being allowed to kill anymore mirrors the way the character had been culturally defanged by the time this film premiered. The film effectively ended Child’s Play as a franchise with theatrical clout, until the new remake.
7. Bride of Chucky (1998)Director: Ronny Yu
If Child’s Play 3 is an example of the original film’s established formula beginning to run thin, then Bride of Chucky is something of an overreaction to the idea that the series should go in a new direction. It wasn’t a bad thought, per se, to abandon the convention that Chucky was going to keep stalking the same kid (Andy Barclay) over and over in order to swap his soul into Andy’s body, but Bride of Chucky tries to reinvent itself a bit too slavishly in the mold of Scream, and believes itself to be significantly more clever than it is. This is the Child’s Play film that first prioritized mythology and character-building over slasher elements, to its detriment.
Jennifer Tilly makes her debut here as Tiffany, a former girlfriend of serial killer Charles Lee Ray, whose soul is of course contained within the Chucky doll. She’s responsible for his resurrection following the end of Child’s Play 3, and she chews her dialogue with a tacky abandon that is fairly enjoyable. The “criminal lovers on the run” storyline, on the other hand, is an awkward fit for the series, abandoning the tension and horror elements of earlier entries in favor of lovers’ quarrels and the requisite puppet sex scene you knew would be there. One wonders why they bother with allusions to Bride of Frankenstein at all, when the tone has more in common with Natural Born Killers. But hey, at least we got a Chucky appearance in World Championship Wrestling out of it—Brad Dourif voice and all.
6. Child’s Play 3 (1991)Director: Jack Bender
The early ’90s were a rough time for the slasher genre—and horror in general. A wave of rising, Gen X cynicism seemed to hurt the genre’s ability to fall back on its tropes, and the films of the time period often responded by pushing the boundaries of silliness or refreshing their settings, rather than making earnest attempts at being scary. There was a palpable sense of ennui in the air at the time, which didn’t really dissipate until the release of Scream in 1996. So it is with Child’s Play 3, which directly continues the story of the first two films, albeit with a little something missing. Of all the Child’s Play entries, this is the one that most feels like it could be tweaked into something significantly better than it is.
Andy Barclay (Justin Whalin) is again our protagonist, now a “troubled” 16-year-old sent to live at a military academy because he can’t leave his childhood “fantasies” of a killer doll behind him. But he’s significantly less likable as a flat-topped, milquetoast teenager than he was as a brave little boy. Chucky is of course revived, and makes a beeline for the school, where his nature is accidentally discovered not by Andy, but by a very young cadet named Tyler (Jeremy Sylvers), one of the dumber horror movie protagonists in history, unable to see that this living, very clearly evil doll poses him some kind of threat, even after being warned by Andy. We then devolve into the same body-swapping plot seen in the first two films, except with Tyler as the target and Andy as the sibling-like protector. Overall, Child’s Play 3 is simply less focused and more bluntly written than its predecessors, with weak supporting characters and a military school setting that isn’t well utilized. The ultimate highlight is its conclusion in a totally unrelated carnival haunted house, where Chucky admittedly dies one of his better deaths, being chopped to bits by a giant industrial fan in a geyser of blood and gore.