The result is the complete obliteration of the house, which also leaves Kyle's fate unknown. But as Kyle enters, the audience knows what Kyle does not: Tiffany has already fled the scene and booby-trapped the house with a bomb that's triggered to detonate when the front door opens. She drugs Jake and Lexy as she goes to rescue Devon ( Björgvin Arnarson) from Charles Lee Ray's childhood home where Tiffany ( Jennifer Tilly) has set up her and Chucky's base camp featuring an army of vintage Good Guy dolls along with Chucky-possessed-Nica and a gagged-and-bound Devon. It makes sense for Chucky's master plan (and extreme narcissism) by creating an "army of me", but it's especially cold and depressing when you consider that Chucky's attempts to bond with the lonely and misunderstood teenagers of Hackensack - especially Jake, Junior, and even Lexy - were only a means to reach his eventual endgame.īut Kyle has no plan to put the kids in danger. The only way to do that, Kyle explains, is for Chucky to successfully corrupt the innocence of a child, which is why he has been so hell-bent on stoking the rage within Jake and his friends and encouraging them to commit murder. It turns out that Chucky is intending to use a new voodoo spell to split his soul into multiple hosts in order to create an army of Charles Lee Ray-possessed Good Guy dolls (much like he did in Cult of Chucky). RELATED: 'Chucky' Review: A Weak Outing for the Classic Evil Doll But Jake and Lexy ( Alyvia Alyn Lind) are quickly intercepted by a warning-bearing Kyle ( Christine Elise) who provides some much-needed answers to the terrified teens by explaining the reason why Chucky has been interfering in their lives. The finale picks up where the penultimate episode left off with Andy Barclay ( Alex Vincent) arriving at Junior's ( Teo Briones) house to help Jake ( Zackary Arthur) kill Chucky once and for all. The first few episodes could be considered a slow burn but the latter half of the series amps up the pace, thrills, and body count. While Chucky breathed new life into the franchise with its sharp humor, relatable characters, fantastic puppeteering, and crisp camera work, the show's finale is one that's equal parts thrilling and somewhat unsatisfying, leaving quite a few loose ends untied. The final moments of the killer doll's first foray onto the small screen was indeed as "bonkers" as franchise veteran, Fiona Dourif, promised, with plenty of murderous mayhem as the series' fresh, young characters teamed up with the legacy characters of the Child's Play series in a last-ditch effort to stop Chucky's murderous plans. Anyone who needs proof that Chucky ( Brad Dourif) was never a Good Guy to begin with only needs to watch the Season 1 finale of Chucky.
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