Puppet master Wiki
Advertisement
Puppet master Wiki
Curse of the Puppet Master
Sixth

Release Date

1998

Director

David DeCoteau

Next Film

Retro Puppet Master

Previous Film

Puppet Master 5: The Final Chapter

Next Film (chronological)

Puppet Master II

Puppet Master 6: Curse of the Puppet Master (Otherwise known as '''Curse of the Puppet Master''') is a 1998 horror film written by Benjamin Carr and David Schmoeller, and directed by David DeCoteau. It is the sixth film in the Puppet Master franchise, the sequel to 1989's original Puppet Master, and stars George Peck as a scientist experimenting with transforming humans into puppets, his daughter, played by Emily Harrison and Josh Green as an orphan commissioned by the scientist to construct a puppet for his experiment. While Puppet Master 5 was intended to be the final installment of the series four years earlier, Curse of the Puppet Master is a standalone sequel that promptly revived the series, which has been ongoing since.

Plot[]

In The House of Marvels, a doll museum, with Andre Toulon's puppets in a cage, watching their current master, a man named Dr. Magrew (George Peck), stuffing something into a crate. Before leaving, he promises the puppets that things will be different next time. He drives into the woods, where he puts down the crate and douses it with gasoline, then sets it on fire. From inside the crate, faint screaming can be heard. The next morning, Dr. Magrew's daughter, Jane (Emily Harrison), has just returned home from college. She asks her father about Matt, his assistant. Her father tells her that Matt left, since his father was ill. He and Jane decide to drive into town to take their minds off things. Robert "Tank" Winsley (Josh Green), a very tall but meek young man, works at the gas station in town. He passes his time by carving small wooden statues. He is frequently harassed by bully Joey Carp (Michael D. Guerin). Jane and Dr. Magrew arrive and tell Joey to get lost. Jane finds one of the statues that Robert was carving and complements him on it, then shows it to her father. Dr. Magrew introduces himself and Jane to Robert, and offers Robert a job helping him with the Marvel show. Robert accepts and they drive back to the house.

Upon arriving, they introduce Robert to Toulon's puppets, which amaze him, since they're alive. At dinner, Magrew reveals that he bought the puppets at an auction years ago, and that he is tried to make a living puppet just like Toulons', but has never been successful. He asks Robert if he'll help him carve the puppet, to which he agrees. The next day, during the show, the town sheriff, Sheriff Garvey (Robert Donavan) and Deputy Wayburn (Jason-Shane Scott) arrive. They tell Magrew that Matt is missing, and they wonder if Magrew's seen him since he left. He insists that he has not, but they did not quite believe him. That night, Magrew gives Robert the wood and the blueprints for the puppet. Robert does not understand how the puppet will live. Magrew tells him the way to make a dead thing live is: "You put your soul into it". Robert begins carving and works non-stop. At dinner a few nights later, Magrew reveals that Matt did carving for him as well. While Matt's work had quality, Robert's work has perfection, which is what he wants to make. He uses Blade as an example: "He never tires, never hungers, knows no fear, tells no lies, feels no pain, knows no secrets. And what is man except a being at war with himself? But not Blade. He has no hidden motives, no secret self. He is purely and perfectly what he is. In fact, I think the world would be a better place if we were all like him."

That night, Robert wakes up and finds that his legs have turned into carved, wooden legs, like a puppet. But this ends up being a nightmare. While Robert carves the puppet, Jane thinks he is working too hard and while trying to get his attention, causes him to cut himself. She bandages the cut on his hand for him, and asks him about himself. He reveals that he is an orphan, and he has never been smart enough to go to college. Jane tells him that his hands can do things that people with brains only imagine being able to do. They both develop feelings for one another and kiss. Later that night, Robert has another nightmare, but this time, his entire body (minus his head) is wooden, complete with inner clockwork gears. The next day, Jane, thinking that Robert is working too hard, convinces him to take a break. They drive to the woods, and Jane tells him about a beautiful clearing in the woods she found as a little girl. On the way, they stumble upon the half-burnt box that Dr. Magrew burned at the film's beginning.

Robert reaches in and pulls out a carved wooden hand, much like a puppet hand. He tries to show it to Jane, but she is walking away. Meanwhile, Joey and his friends are in the woods when Jane arrives. Joey begins to harass her and steps in her way, blocking her. She continuously shoves him to the point where he is angry, and he sexually harasses her. Robert arrives and tells Joey to leave her alone. Joey ignores Robert and threatens to rape Jane. Finally, Robert snaps and throws Joey onto the hood of his car and begins choking him. Jane pulls him off, and they drive back to the house. At the house, Robert confesses that when he was choking Joey, it had nothing to do with him or Jane. He felt like he was choking all the things that ever plagued him in his life. Dr. Magrew tells Robert that he is at war with himself: "There's another self inside, a true or more natural self. A creature of violence, with no fear, no conscience. A killer. You spend your whole life battling the self that lives inside. And what happened today, though just for a moment, you lost that battle. The real you, the true you, came out." Robert does not know if he is right or not, but he would "rather die than have it come out again."

Later that night, Joey comes to the "House of Marvels" to beat Robert up, but then decides to try to rape Jane again. As Jane sees him and tells him to get out, Pinhead, who was in the room, jumps at Joey and starts choking him, but Joey pulls him off and then starts squashing him with his foot, breaking off his left hand, and breaks his right arm. Dr. Magrew and Tank show up, but Joey makes a run for it. Dr. Magrew, who wants revenge, takes Blade and Tunneler to Joey's house, and sends them to kill him. Joey, who's lifting weights, gets his forehead slashed by Blade, and gets his crotch drilled by Tunneler. Back at the house, Robert shows up at Jane's room and shows her that he fixed Pinhead, Jane thanks Robert, then they start to kiss, she then tells him that he can stay if he likes, then they kiss again. As Dr. Magrew comes back, he sees Robert coming out of Jane's room, and then decides to talk to Jane, and is then surprised when he sees that Pinhead's fixed, but then he starts going crazy when Jane says she loves Robert, and tells her that he does not want to see her get hurt, and then leaves. Five days later, Friday, Jane finds Robert very sick, and then has her father call the doctor, but he really does not, he just fakes it. Then he tells Jane that he has to go pick up something for Jane at the post office at the edge of town, but Jane offers to go pick it up, while Dr. Magrew waits for the non-coming doctor to come. Back at Joey's house, the medical examiner (William Knight) believes that Joey's death was intentional. Sheriff Garvey starts to ask one of Joey's friends, named Art (Marc Newburger), when was the last time they saw Joey and who else was there, and he says last Sunday in the woods, and Mr. Magrew's daughter was there. Hearing the name Magrew, Sheriff Garvey and Deputy Wayburn decide to give Dr. Magrew a little visit. But as Garvey and Wayburn arrive at the House of Marvels, Six Shooter throws a rope around Wayburn's neck and Pinhead pulls the rope, causing him to fall and gets his head tunneled by Tunneler, killing him. At the same time, Blade slashes Garvey's leg, making him fall and drop his gun, and then he and Jester start slashing his face, with Magrew laughing as he watches them kill. Meanwhile at the post office, Jane keeps asking the shipping agent (Patrick Thomas) if he is sure what her father ordered is not there, so the agent calls Tommy Berke (J.R. Bookwalter) to ask him will it come in, but Tommy says that Magrew has not bought anything from him in the past six months.

Hearing this, Jane decides to go back to the woods to see what that burned box was. As she grabs what's inside of it, she sees that it's one of Matt's carved puppets, then it starts to speak: "Jane!" for help in Matt's voice. Terrified at what she saw, she then realizes that her father's going to do the same thing to Robert, so she quickly gets in her car, and drives back to the House. Meanwhile at the house, Dr. Magrew puts Robert's soul into the puppet he especially made for Robert via electricity, and it finally works this time, but the puppets are angry because they did not want him to kill Robert, so Blade slashes Magrew's legs, hand, and face, Tunneler drills through his leg, and Pinhead hits him with a metal cane. As Jane arrives at the house, she finds her father nearly dead, bleeding to death, with him pointing at the new "tank puppet", saying "I did it". Suddenly, the Tank Puppet starts to move and points its arm at Dr. Magrew. The arm shoots out a bolt of electricity, and electrocutes Dr. Magrew straight between the eyes. The film ends with a shot of Dr. Magrew screaming before death, and Jane screaming in horrified terror.


Trivia[]

  • Charles Band had considered Curse of the Puppet Master to be a standalone film, but later when he made Puppet Master: The Legacy, it became part of the official continuity. This is backed up by the Action Lab Comics which have references to this movie in it.
  • While the plot of this film is a reworked script from the 1973 film Sssssss only with puppets instead of snakes, it was originally planned to be much different. Curse of the Puppet Master was originally meant to be the first of an epic Puppet Wars trilogy where Andre Toulon and his creations would battle the Mummy, Frankenstein and Dracula, with Guy Rolfe set to return as Toulon and Turhan Bey being considered for the part of a mysterious Egyptian. Funding fell through at the last minute, but not before second unit footage was shot of an old-fashioned steam train in Romania, footage that was eventually used in Retro Puppet Master.[1]
  • This is the first puppet master movie that does not have the character Andre Toulon, though his hands appear in archival footage in the introduction scene and his name appears written on the trunk.
  • Leech Woman reappears In this movie, but did not used any powers or attacked anyone.
  • This movie use’s recycle footage from other puppet master movies.


Characters[]

Puppets[]


Credits[]

<tabber>Hide=|-|Show=

Information from IMDB

Directed by []

David DeCoteau ... (as Victoria Sloan)

Writing Credits  []

Neal Marshall Stevens ... (written by) (as Benjamin Carr)
David Schmoeller ... (characters) (uncredited)

Cast []

[1] George Peck ... Dr. Magrew / Puppet Master
[2] Emily Harrison ... Jane Magrew
[3] Josh Green ... Robert 'Tank' Winsley
[4] Michael Guerin ... Joey Carp
[5] Michael Sollenberger ... Station Owner
[6] Marc Newburger ... Art Cooney
[7] Scott Boyer ... Larry
[8] Jason Dean Booher ... Pogo
[9] Robert Donavan ... Sherrif Garvey
[10] Jason-Shane Scott ... Deputy Wayburn
[11] William Frederick Knight ... Medical Examiner (as William Knight)
[12] Patrick Thomas ... Shipping Agent (as Pat Thomas)
[13] Ariauna Albright ... Operator (voice)
[14] J.R. Bookwalter ... Tommy Berke (voice)
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
[15] Matthew Jason Walsh ... All Puppets (voice) (uncredited)

Produced by []

Albert Band ... executive producer
Charles Band ... executive producer
Gordon Gustafson ... associate producer
Kirk Edward Hansen ... producer

Music by []

Richard Band
Jeffrey Walton ... (as Jeff Walton)

Cinematography by []

Howard Wexler ... director of photography

Film Editing by []

J.R. Bookwalter

Casting By []

Perry Bullington
Robert MacDonald

Production Design by []

Allison Shavitz

Art Direction by []

Dani Michaeli

Costume Design by []

Judi Jensen

Makeup Department []

Katrina Chevalier ... assistant hair stylist / assistant makeup artist
Heidi Grotsky ... key hair stylist (as Heidi Gratsky) / key makeup artist (as Heidi Gratsky)
Kevin Wasner ... Puppet Fabrication and Painter
Mark Williams ... special makeup effects
J.M. Logan ... special makeup effects (uncredited)

Production Management []

Lazar Djokic ... post-production supervisor
Kirk Edward Hansen ... unit production manager
Mickey Kaiserman ... executive in charge of production

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director []

Wendy Palmer ... second second assistant director
Scott Remick ... second assistant director (as Scott D. Remick)
Franklin A. Vallette ... first assistant director (as Franklin Valette)

Art Department []

Alexander Atwood ... art department production assistant
Bill Bradshaw ... property master
James William ... carpenter / scenic artist

Sound Department []

Don Adams ... digital sound editor
Jeff Blehr ... boom operator
J.R. Bookwalter ... supervising sound editor (as Lance Randas)
Paul Vik Marshall ... production sound mixer (as Paul Marshall)
Jake Ryan ... foley artist
Gabriel Shayne ... adr editor
Rick Taub ... boom operator

Visual Effects by []

Matthew Jason Walsh ... visual effects supervisor
Daniel Whoops ... visual effects liason

Camera and Electrical Department []

Shane Buttle ... best boy electric
Rob Carius ... electrician (as Robert Carius)
Alfredo Denila III ... key grip (as Alfredo S. Denila III)
Casey Ellison ... electrician
Adam Harrison ... electrician (as Adam 'Devil Boy' Harrison)
Chip Hart ... best boy grip (as Charles Hart)
C. Clifford Jones ... second assistant camera
Casey Kehoe ... generator operator
Ken Little Jr. ... first assistant camera (as Kenneth J. Little Jr.)
Denis Moran ... gaffer
Gregory Peters ... still photographer (as Greg Peters)
James A. Seale ... best boy grip (as James Anthony Seale)
John Vetter ... second assistant camera
Jose Zambrano Cassella ... camera loader

Costume and Wardrobe Department []

Amy Calnon ... wardrobe supervisor
Emily Jane Chatton ... costumer
Cynthia Cole ... wardrobe assistant
Bethany Gauthier ... costumer
Michelle Matt ... wardrobe assistant (as Michele Matt)
Michelle Thomas ... wardrobe assistant

Editorial Department []

Ariauna Albright ... editorial assistant
David A. Wagner ... editorial assistant

Music Department []

Harry James Picardi ... music editor
Pat Siciliano ... music supervisor
Yolanda Squatpump ... music editor (as Yolonda Squatpump)
David Thompson ... music co-producer
Matthew Jason Walsh ... composer: additional music
Chelene Ward ... music coordinator
Dan Workman ... music engineer / music mixer

Script and Continuity Department []

Jesse Long ... script supervisor (as Jesse H. Long)

Other crew []

Steve Blum ... marketing and creative services
James Budak ... set production assistant
Bennah Burton-Burtt ... assistant: Charles Band
David Caplan ... set production assistant
Janice Clifford ... distribution resources
Casey Ellison ... electronics
Jordan Faeth ... communications services
Janette Gayle ... caterer
Michael Harvey ... corporate accountant
Carol Kitinski ... craft service
Dwight Krizman ... distribution management
Bob Langer ... merchandising
Alan Lau ... accounting assistant
Ana Llorens ... coordinating accountant
David Markosyan ... communications services
Paul Morzov ... vault supervisor
Dave Parker ... promotions
Rick Phares ... distribution services
Mark Rappaport ... puppeteer
Charles Spencer ... financial systems
Gina Tucci ... office manager
Russ Herpich ... lead puppeteer (uncredited)
Susan Laprelle ... puppeteer (uncredited)
Advertisement