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Chucky Is Going Back to Theaters, and Don Mancini Says It’s Going to Be Scary Again

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It has been twenty-two years since Don Mancini’s Chucky was last in a movie theater. Not on streaming. Not on cable. In an actual theater, where you paid for a ticket and sat in the dark with strangers and watched a Good Guy doll wreak havoc on a big screen. Seed of Chucky came out in 2004, and that was the last time Don Mancini put his guy on the big screen. That’s a long time to wait.

The wait is ending. This weekend at Steel City Con in Pittsburgh, Mancini confirmed he is currently writing a brand new Child’s Play film built for theatrical release.

Okay, Here’s What We Know

Dread Central confirmed the announcement and the details are the right details. Mancini is specifically modeling the new film on what Curse of Chucky did in 2013. If you remember, Curse came out of nowhere after the full self-parody of Seed, stripped everything back to one location, turned the lights off, and made Chucky genuinely frightening again. Then it connected to the whole timeline in a late reveal that made longtime fans lose their minds in the best possible way. That approach worked so well it almost felt like an apology letter. The new film is aiming for the same thing.

The tonal goal is scary. Not campy. Not self-aware. Scary in the way the original Child’s Play was scary, in the way Curse was scary. The version of Chucky that made a two-foot doll feel like an actual threat. Mancini has not forgotten how to do that. He just hasn’t had the budget and the big screen to do it on in a very long time.

The TV show’s events will be acknowledged and kept in canon. Because of course they will. This is Don Mancini. The man has maintained continuity across this franchise for nearly four decades. He is not throwing anything out.

A Brief and Painful Recent History

After Seed of Chucky, the franchise went dark on the big screen for nine years.Curse of Chucky in 2013 went straight to VOD. Cult of Chucky in 2017 did the same. Both were genuinely excellent. Both deserved bigger audiences than direct to video could give them.

Then the TV series launched on Syfy in 2021 and gave Mancini something no single film ever could, which was room. Three seasons. The full mythology. Pretty much every surviving character from across the franchise. A young gay lead that Mancini has spoken about being genuinely proud of.

Then Syfy cancelled it.

Mancini was blindsided. His statement at the time: “I’m heartbroken over the news that Chucky won’t be coming back for a fourth season. Chucky will return. He ALWAYS comes back.”

He was not wrong. He just didn’t say how.

The Man Has Been Planning This for a While

Chucky

This announcement did not come from nowhere. Back in 2024, before the fan base had even fully processed the cancellation, Mancini told the Scream Dreams Podcast that something was already forming. Fangoria covered the reveal and the quote is very Don Mancini: “I’m in the early stages of starting to develop one now, which is designed to work in tandem with the TV show. The ongoing attempt to try to conquer the universe with Chucky.”

Two years later, “early stages” has become “I am writing it” and theatrical is confirmed. This franchise has always moved at its own pace. Mancini doesn’t make Chucky movies because a studio put it on a release calendar. He makes them when he has something to say. Apparently he has something to say.

Why This Matters More Than Just Another Sequel

Chucky

We’ve covered a lot of Chucky news over the years here at iHorror. We were there for Season Two’s launch, when the show was building real momentum and Mancini was having the time of his life letting Chucky run wild through a Catholic school with Jennifer Tilly and Brad Dourif. Good times. The show had a devoted audience that understood exactly what it was trying to do.

But there’s something that a theatrical horror film can do that a cable TV series never quite can. It controls the room. You can’t pause it, can’t look at your phone, can’t back it up and rewatch the scary part through your fingers from the safety of your couch. A horror film in a theater, especially one that’s actually trying to be frightening, is a shared experience in a way that streaming and television haven’t figured out how to replicate. The last time Chucky was in that room, it was 2004 and the film was Seed of Chucky, which was a very different kind of movie from what Mancini is apparently planning now.

Mancini has always been best when he’s working against the expectations the franchise built. Curse of Chucky came out of nowhere after the self-parody of Seed and reminded everyone that this character could still be genuinely menacing. A theatrical release modeled on that same instinct, scary and focused and connected to everything that came before, is exactly the kind of Chucky movie we didn’t know we were waiting for until this weekend.

What We Don’t Know Yet

Chucky

No cast has been announced. No release date. Mancini is writing. That’s what we have. Given the franchise’s history, that could mean we’re eighteen months out or three years out, because this is not a franchise that rushes itself and that has mostly been to its benefit.

What we do know is that the man who has been telling Charles Lee Ray’s story since 1988 is not done with it. Chucky has survived VOD, survived cable cancellation, survived a reboot he had nothing to do with, survived everything. A Good Guy doll never really dies. He just keeps coming back.

We’ll be watching for updates. And we’ll be in that theater.

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Indie Horror

Panic Fest 2026 Review: ‘Frogman Returns’ Is A Thrilling Sequel That Goes For The Croak!

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Horror as a genre has a greater propensity for sequels than almost anything else in the world of cinema. There have been scores of slasher sequels from the likes of Friday The 13th to A Nightmare on Elm Street to even sequels to seemingly stand-alone affairs like The Exorcist and The Blair Witch Project. While some may be seen as cash grabs or of diminishing returns, it cannot be argued that there have been some phenomenal sequels to horror films such as Aliens and Evil Dead 2 among many others. So imagine my pleasant surprise to see that 2023’s Frogman is back in the aptly named Frogman Returns!

The sequel picks up not too long after the original’s cryptid catastrophe. The Loveland, Ohio Frogman and surrounding cult that was exposed by amateur filmmaker Dallas (Nathan Tymoshuk) has since disappeared and the terror of the magic wand wielding amphibian seemingly ended. Having lost his friend Scotty (Benny Barrett) and a falling out with Amy (Chelsey Grant), Dallas has found a new life heading a cryptid reality web show. But when strange forces call him and his team back to Loveland, will he have to face the Frogman for a final battle?

I was a big fan of the original Frogman upon release, and was interested in seeing where director Anthony Cousins was going to take the story. I’m happy to report that he did the best kind of thing you can do for a sequel like this: made it weirder and wilder! Not only is there Frogman, but a number of classic cryptids have encounters as the genie is out of the bottle and Dallas irrevocably proved that there are truly monsters among us. There is a pretty memorable scene involving a run-in with the living pants-like Fresno Nightcrawler creature that establishes what a brave and bizarre new world things have become since the previous film. Monsters are basically a fact of life now. So, of course, people are finding ways to profit from it.

Dallas’ arc continues from the first film and I do like how he carries the weight and guilt of Scotty’s disappearance and his disconnection with Amy. There are real consequences to the ways things went wrong previously and Dallas is haunted by the consequences of his obsession. Now he attempts to make things right in some form as his adventures bring him back to where it all began. And for those here for Frogman… without spoiling too much, everyone’s favorite amphibious cryptid does make a triumphant return. With a neon explosive finale that left me craving even more.

Frogman Returns does a fine job of documenting the new adventure in the traditional found footage format, with the foundation of Dallas’ new reality web show keeping the cameras rolling. Combining that with ample and memorable practical fx for all manner of beasts and gore to see. Exploding heads, zapped limbs, and so much more get captured on camera in all their visceral glory.

Overall, if you were a fan of the first Frogman, then Frogman Returns is a more than worthwhile follow up to digest.

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Jessica T Deveraux Got Possessed At Her Own Bar

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Key of Bones: Curse of the Ghost Pirate needed a drag queen to get possessed by a pirate ghost in a Key West nightclub. They found one suprisingly easily. She had been working at that nightclub since 2008. That is either a very lucky casting choice or the universe doing its job.

Jessica T Deveraux is not a newcomer to any room she walks into. She has been competing in drag pageants across multiple states since she was 14. She held the title of Queen Mother XXXV, one of the most respected titles in the Florida Keys. She has been a resident headliner at Aqua Nightclub since 2008.

“When the opportunity came up, I was super excited, but also super nervous,” Deveraux said. “I was excited because it was something I’d always wanted to do. And nervous because I had never done it before. I had no idea what to expect.”

She said yes anyway. The film now exists.

What the Film Actually Is

Key of Bones: Curse of the Ghost Pirate is a horror-comedy written and directed by Tony Armer, shot entirely in Key West. The plot follows a local waitress, a ghost tour guide, and a tourist who accidentally awaken a curse connected to the legendary pirate Anne Bonny. What follows involves drag queens, lesbian pirate ghosts, and cursed treasure, which is either an accurate description of any given Saturday in Key West or the most efficient logline of the year.

Armer pitched it as Shaun of the Dead meets Goonies meets Pirates of the Caribbean. Deveraux confirmed that is the pitch she received. She also confirmed it did not fully prepare her. “As much as you think you’re prepared for that,” she said, “until you actually walk on set and see what’s happening, or watch the movie and see what’s happening, anything you might have prepared goes out the window and you just have to feed off the energy of the moment.”

Desiree

The character is Desiree, a drag queen who gets possessed midway through the film by one of the pirate ghosts and spends a substantial chunk of screen time fighting herself. “Desiree is kind of a take-charge drag queen who gets possessed and loses her own faculties and is now controlled by a ghost pirate,” Deveraux said. “So there’s this inner struggle with her having to follow orders while still trying to be the fierce queen that she is.”

The scene where Desiree first encounters Anne, the pirate ghost, was filmed at Aqua Nightclub. The bar where Deveraux has performed every week for going on eighteen years. “One of the most exciting scenes was when Desiree first meets Anne. That scene was filmed at the bar that I work at, Aqua Nightclub. So that was really cool to see my home bar become the set.”

The Chaos Was Organized

Deveraux describes the set with real fondness. “You’d have people over here rehearsing stunts, people over here getting their makeup done, people over there shooting an actual scene, while other people were at craft services. But everybody was so professional that it all ran very smoothly.”

There were exceptions. Night shoots in Key West require quiet. Key West is structurally opposed to quiet. “One of the most chaotic moments was when we were trying to film at night and we needed quiet on the set, and you had two different bars in the area playing different songs very loudly.” Two bars. Two songs. Simultaneously. The city did not pause production to cooperate with production.

She also arrived without knowing about hurry-up-and-wait, which is the specific misery of film sets where you spend long stretches fully ready while nothing happens. Deveraux was in full drag during these stretches. “When you’re in full drag in five pairs of tights and wearing a body form, that can become very uncomfortable. But that’s the nature of the beast, and I’ll know what to expect in the future.”

There is also something film does that a stage never does, it withholds the response. “When you perform for a live crowd, you know if they’re enjoying what you’ve done or not enjoying what you’ve done almost instantaneously, and you can feed off of that energy to heighten the experience. In film, you don’t really know. You have to wait months to find out if the audience actually enjoys the performance.”

The Eighteen-Year Overnight

Jessica T Deveraux started performing at 14. A performing arts high school, an LGBT youth center down the road, and a drag pageant that needed entrants. She entered with help from some of the more seasoned queens around her. She won. She kept going.

Fifteen-plus years of pageant competition across multiple states. What do people on the outside not understand about that world? “To be successful in pageants, you need to have discipline, you need to have drive, you need to have desire, and you need to know who you are. It also helps if you have some money.” She laughed. “Pageants can be expensive. But they can be so rewarding, and they truly help you grow not just as an entertainer but as a person.”

The Aqua residency has now run for going on eighteen years. That is an unusual thing in an industry that usually offers neither consistency nor loyalty. “I am so blessed to have been given this opportunity to work at Aqua Nightclub. It is very nice to have a consistent weekly gig for going on eighteen years, and I know that I’m very lucky and grateful for all of the love, work, and family that I have because of it.”

As Queen Mother XXXV, she produced a runway competition benefiting the Visiting Nurse Association and Hospice of the Florida Keys. “Not only was it one of the most respected titles in Key West, but it also allowed me the chance to give back.”

The Kinship

Drag and horror share a history. Camp, transformation, the performance of something larger and stranger than ordinary life. Both traditions have been running these ideas in parallel for decades. Deveraux came to Key of Bones from the drag side, and while talking about that overlap she surfaced something she had not put together before: one of her all-time favorite movies, a film she has always loved to quote, is The Craft. The horror-drag kinship had been living in her personal canon the whole time.

“There is definitely a kinship between the two worlds,” she said. “However, as someone who is new to the horror scene and not knowing what to expect, I did feel an ease being able to go into it having had the drag experience.”

“Drag queens are some of the strongest people, and we’ve been here since day one and we’re not going anywhere. Drag queens are community leaders. We will be there to help support our community and any community that asks us.”

Both horror audiences and drag audiences built themselves around things the mainstream spent decades looking at sideways. They know each other.

What Comes Next

Deveraux was asked if Key of Bones was a one-time thing or the beginning of something. “I would definitely love to do more film or television. This is definitely not a one and done thing for me. And my inbox is open, casting directors. Please message me.”

She was also asked whether she would take a straight horror role. No camp. No comedy. Just terror. “I would definitely take it. However, I would have to do some research on how to play it straight.” Then: “After the amount of fun I had on set for Key of Bones, I can only imagine what running in terror versus sashaying in terror would be like.”

“I want people to see my range as a performer. That I can act as well as dance. To see someone who loves and has passion in all that they do.”

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Panic Fest 2026 Review: ‘Creature Of The Pines’ Is An Interesting Found Footage Horror That Walks A Beaten Path

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There are certain parts of the world that have an inherent evil or cursed nature to them. The Bermuda Triangle, where so many ships have vanished in its waters. Death Valley, where many have met their end in the unforgiving desert. And then there’s The Pine Barrens of New Jersey. A woodland infamous for the cryptid named The Jersey Devil.

While The Jersey Devil may be the mascot or face of sorts for the area, there are other dangers within those woods. Specifically, an area known as Pine Hollow. Infamous for numerous disappearances of local and hikers. While some attribute it to natural hazards, others say the source of these incidents may be tied to folklore. An ancient mimic of indigenous legend that targets those wandering its woods. After a trio of hikers disappear and leaves only one shell shocked survivor and witness wandering the wilderness, a documentary crew attempts to clarify between fact and fiction… only to find themselves subject to their own torments.

Creature Of The Pines is a decent found footage/mockumentary endeavor, and I’m always a sucker for that kind of framing. I will also give points for taking an original approach on the region rather than using a more well known cryptid or monster. Instead, crafting their own beast with the shapeshifting demon of indigenous lore. It did make it more interesting than relying on a more infamous antagonist, allowing the movie to make up its own rules and history behind the titular creature.

Unfortunately, the story does fall into a lot of the cliches of the sub-genre as well. Lots of scenes building up strange sounds coming form the woods leading to some shaky cam segments as a character is dragged off by an unseen force and such. The talking heads portions of the mockumentary featured some decent actors and subjects that kept things fairly fresh. Especially the former forest ranger who discussed the dark and terrible history of Pine Hollow.

Even still, the third act was kind of a mixed bag with the final confrontation and reveal of the horror. Ambiguity tends to work better in found footage for a reason, sometimes its better to leave the evil up to the imagination. There’s also a twist to the ending that felt a bit obvious considering the build up.

But, if you’re a big fan of found footage and mockumentary horror like I am, (especially for New England based horror) then Creature Of The Pines is worth at least a watch.

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