
Color, 2010, 83m.
Directed by David DeCoteau
Starring Levi Fiehler, Jenna Gallaher, Taylor M. Graham, Tom Sandoval, Jerry Hoffman
Full Moon (Blu-ray/DVD) (US R0 HD/NTSC) / WS (2.35:1) (16:9) / DD5.1
The franchise that put Full Moon on the map as one of the best-loved horror video franchises of the early '90s, Puppet Master has certainly seen its ups and downs over the years. The first film was certainly the slickest and featured the best cast, while the second and third films in many ways improved on their source. After that, things took a severe downward spiral due to rapidly diminishing budgets and fewer resources, with a reliance of recycled footage and claustrophobic, limited sets eventually devouring the entire series.
Our story kicks off in 1939 at the Bodega Bay Inn where original puppet master Toulon committed suicide as he was being hunted down by mysterious men in black. Intercutting footage from the original film with a new subplot, we meet our hero, Danny (Fiehler), a young friend of Toulon's who manages to grab the special, living puppets from their hiding place after their owner's death. An idealistic and patriotic sort who wants to fight the nasty Axis forces threatening freedom around the globe, he finally gets his chance when nearby Chinatown is infiltrated by nefarious Nazi and Japanese spies trying to take down a munitions plant. With a clutch of homicidal puppets in his possession, he sees the perfect opportunity to wipe out a few bad guys.
about Torch, introduced in the second film.) The decision to make another World War II-era entry is something of a mixed blessing as it ties in interestingly with Toulon's Revenge, period-wise, but also finds itself trying to compete with that ambitious entry from the same director. That said, Fiehler does a surprisingly good job with his lead role which demands that he carry about 75% of the screen time, and the visual look of the film is often moody and striking with some nifty widescreen compositions adding some production value even when the puppets themselves are deprived of their lovable stop motion antics. The violence is thankfully more potent than the wretched PG-13 entries, though it doesn't aim for the same gore and T&A excesses of the best films. All told, it's nice to see Full Moon back in the game again, and after warming up with this one, they'll hopefully have at least one more classic entry left in a series that apparently refuses to die.