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  1. Jun 28, 2019 · Of all the classic horror movie tropes, "killer doll" may seem like the least terrifying of the bunch, but the lasting legacies of Chucky and Annabelle tell a different story. For every laughable ...

    • Brahms
    • Slappy
    • Billy
    • Babyface
    • Billy - Dead Silence
    • Blade
    • Annabelle
    • Doll from Deep Red
    • Talky Tina
    • Chucky

    Since Lauren Cohan stars in The Boy it’s fun to imagine that the movie is actually Maggie’s prequel story to The Walking Dead. Dolls AND zombies?! Hopefully, therapy still exists in the apocalypse. In reality, The Boyis about Cohan’s character going to a creepy house in order to take care of a crazy couple’s porcelain doll named Brahms. Apparently,...

    Fun fact. Slappy The Dummy never slaps anybody in any of the Goosebumps books or films. NOT ONCE. What a missed opportunity. Slappy is easily the most iconic villain of theGoosebumpsuniverse. It makes sense considering that Slappy is downright maniacal. Slappy’s whole motivation is to enslave whoever loves him. Isn’t that super sucky of him? RELATE...

    Between Saw andDead Silence it seems like director James Wan has a special affinity for terrifying puppets. It’s shocking that Wann didn’t make a talking puppet be the villain in hisAquaman movie. Although Billy has become the face of theSawfranchise at this point, his introduction in the original film terrified audiences back in 2004. People wen’t...

    Babyface is sort of weird because the very concept of Toy Storyis creepy in and of itself. The thought of toys standing up and talking on their own once a person leaves the room is a terrifying thought. However, Pixar is able to make all of this seem normal until Babyface shows up. RELATED: Child's Play: 10 Callbacks To The Original Movies Toy Stor...

    Between Saw and Dead Silenceit seems like director James Wan has a special affinity for terrifying puppets…named Billy. Look, if a name works it just works. Billy 2.0 basically looks like Slappy except with way more stage makeup. He’s a henchman for a dead ventriloquist named Mary Shaw. What had happened is that many years ago Mary was murdered by ...

    Any kid growing up in the nineties the probably remembers going to Blockbuster and always seeing the Puppet Master VHS with Blade on the cover. The bigger question is why was Puppet Masteralways left on the shelf? Were people that terrified of its VHS jacket? Blade’s character design is really scary. His face looks like a demented version of V from...

    We’re starting to be convinced that the reason James Wan makes so many movies about possessed dolls is only because he wants to dominate every top ten list on this list. Who can blame him? It’s a tremendous honor. Annabelle has had a surprising amount of longevity. The character went from being a standout side character in The Conjuringto being a h...

    Can some horror films at least try to have titles that won’t absolutely terrify their audience before even seeing the movie? Deep Red. Might as well call it Blood or Gore or This Movie Has A Horrifying Doll In It: You’ve Been Warned. RELATED: 10 Iconic Horror Villains Ranked By Kill Count Deep Redis one of horror maestro Dario Argento’s most famous...

    Sure Talky Tina comes from a television show, but so what. Twilight Zone’s Talky Tina is where it all began. Child’s Play is almost the exact same plot as The Living Doll episode minus all of the marital themes. All of the creepy two-faced nature of killer dolls ( They love to play with kids, but they love killing adults even more) was very much ce...

    It’s fun to talk about Child’s Play since it always gives someone the opportunity to say Bride of Chucky’s amazing tagline. Chucky gets lucky.Look, there’s no denying that Chucky is absolutely the poster child for killer dolls. The red hair, scars (which appeared in the later films), and overalls are all iconic images embedded into everyone’s brain...

    • Declan Gallagher
    • 6 min
    • The clown doll — Poltergeist (1982) Onscreen appearances: While a fairly minor character in Tobe Hooper's 1982 freak-out classic Poltergeist, the clown doll is one of the most-remembered antagonists in that frenzied flick.
    • Billy — Saw franchise (2004–present) Onscreen appearances: Suitably, Billy was introduced in James Wan's 2004 directorial debut — the indie smash Saw — and has been asked back for each of the sequels, providing significant jolts up through Jigsaw (2017).
    • Mr. Slausen's mannequins — Tourist Trap (1979) Onscreen appearances: In 1979, before he made his name as director of Puppet Master, David Schmoeller helmed a slightly different killer doll flick in the form of Tourist Trap, a creepy grindhouse oddity about a group of teens who stumble upon Mr. Slausen (Chuck Connors) and his decrepit museum of hideously lifelike mannequins who are keen to recruit the young travelers to their ranks.
    • Zuni fetish doll — Trilogy of Terror (1975) Onscreen appearances: The Zuni fetish doll met American television audiences on March 4, 1975 in the third segment of Trilogy of Terror, a horror anthology starring Karen Black in three disparate roles (and stories), penned by writers Richard Matheson (I Am Legend, What Dreams May Come) and William F. Nolan (Logan's Run), with direction by genre veteran Dan Curtis (Dark Shadows, Kolchak: The Night Stalker).
    • Contributor
    • Puppet Master (1989) 5.7. The work of esteemed puppeteer Toulon, and his creations' that have a life of their own, lead to the demise of the creator. When a group of psychics begin to research the past of Toulon, his puppets come to life in order to avenge the death of their beloved father.
    • The Doll Master (2004) 5.8. 5 young people stumble upon a doll museum in the woods, inhabited by a wheel chair bound creator and his peculiar assistant.
    • The Pit (1981) 5.8. After discovering a pit in the woods with blood thirsty creatures, a young boy uses the location to exact revenge on those around him.
    • The Boy (2016) 6.0. An American nanny is shocked to find that her new job for a prominent British family is to take care of a doll. As she spends time with the creepy doll, the nanny begins to expect that there is something inherently evil about the porcelain child.
    • Child's Play. Catherine Hicks, Chris Sarandon, Alex Vincent. 233 votes. Child's Play is a chilling horror classic that has been terrifying audiences since its release in 1988.
    • Child's Play 2. Alex Vincent, Jenny Agutter, Gerrit Graham. 180 votes. As the sequel to the original cult classic, Child's Play 2 (1990) continues to explore the dark story of Chucky, arguably one of cinema's most frightening evil dolls.
    • Poltergeist. Craig T. Nelson, JoBeth Williams, Beatrice Straight. 155 votes. Poltergeist (1982), directed by Tobe Hooper and co-written/produced by Steven Spielberg, is an iconic supernatural thriller that still sends shivers down spines today.
    • Dead Silence. Ryan Kwanten, Amber Valletta, Donnie Wahlberg. 151 votes. Directed by James Wan and written by Leigh Whannell, the creative duo behind Saw, Dead Silence (2007) is a chilling horror film that delves into the terrifying world of ventriloquist dolls.
  2. Nov 19, 2023 · Dolls holds a formative but overlooked role in the killer doll subgenre of horror. This film stands out among the scariest horror movies about killer dolls for two key reasons. Firstly, Dolls' practical effects and puppetry - while charmingly rough - are frighteningly believable for its time. Secondly, the movie's complex moral turns are not ...

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  4. Jan 5, 2023 · Review: Killer-doll horror-comedy ‘M3GAN’ is delightfully deranged. The title robot and Violet McGraw in “M3GAN.”. Last fall the internet witnessed a rare phenomenon: the meteoric, meme ...

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