Los Angeles Times

It’s still pulling the killing strings

- — Noel Murray

The long-running “Puppet Master” series may not be as well-known as “Halloween” or “Friday the 13th,” but for nearly 30 years, it’s been entertaini­ng splatter buffs with one simple, silly premise: What if a bunch of creepy-looking little toys started murdering humans?

For the most part, the “Puppet Master” saga has played out in cheap, convoluted straight-to-video production­s, but “Puppet Master: The Littlest Reich” ups the series’ craft-level considerab­ly, rebooting the franchise with the help of “Bone Tomahawk” and “Brawl in Cell Block 99” screenwrit­er S. Craig Zahler.

Thomas Lennon stars as Edgar, a comic book artist who sees opportunit­y at a convention dedicated to André Toulon (Udo Kier), who in this “Puppet Master” iteration is a Nazi, notorious for his crime-spree and his miniature marauders. Edgar happens to have inherited a Toulon original: a “Blade” doll he hopes to sell to a convention­er.

Zahler doesn’t burden co-directors Sonny Laguna and Tommy Wiklund with much plot. After Edgar and his buddy Markowitz (Nelson Franklin) arrive at the Toulon-fest, the attendees’ puppets start disappeari­ng. Soon the killing starts: Introduce eccentric characters, then slaughter them in disgusting ways.

Between the punchy dialogue, the skilled cast and the impressive animation, “The Littlest Reich” is good, sick fun. It’s got puppets, it’s got gore. Who could ask for anything more? “Puppet Master: The Littlest Reich.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 24 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica.

 ?? RLJE Films ?? THE MURDEROUS PUPPETS are disgusting as ever in this entry that improves on the franchise.
RLJE Films THE MURDEROUS PUPPETS are disgusting as ever in this entry that improves on the franchise.

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