Uh oh, better be on your best behavior...
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seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from China
Uh oh, better be on your best behavior...
Blumhouse collaborated with Pooka Lives actress Felicia Day on a Pooka design, which is available on T-shirts ($24.95), long-sleeve shirts ($29.95), crewneck sweatshirts ($39.99), notebooks ($14.95), and mugs ($14.95).
400 Words on POOKA LIVES! ★★★
The Pooka franchise is like the Purge series in that one must first accept their wildly outrageous premises at face value before they can be enjoyed. The idea of a government-sponsored murder holiday is just as inherently preposterous as believing that children would actually love something as horrific as the Pooka dolls, an unholy cross between a teddy bear and Wes Craven’s Ghostface. Combine that with their eerie red eyes, their habit of repeating back random words they hear in a deep voice, and their maddeningly sinister jingle and you have something about as appealing to kids as the Annabelle doll. But the cognitive disconnect between their mass appeal and their appearance was perfect for Nacho Vigalondo’s Pooka! which premiered in 2018 as an episode of Hulu’s Into the Dark web anthology series. The doll’s terrifying design was the first and most striking indication that something was wrong in the life of its protagonist, a traumatized actor and obviously unreliable narrator. But now Alejandro Brugués’ sequel Pooka Lives! has arrived, and since this film doesn’t take place exclusively in the mind of its hero it must be assumed that it’s occurring in the “real” world and that millions of “real” children love the damned thing. If one can’t get past that premise—and indeed, who could blame them?—they would do better to pass on the film entirely, for it takes Pooka’s popularity as given fact, not imagined fantasy. Mercifully though, Brugués abandons the original film’s bleak tone and aura of tragedy for more straight-forward comedy horror. If Pooka! was the atmospheric, high-concept Alien of the franchise, then Pooka Lives! is its over-the-top Aliens, raising the stakes, raising the body count, and raising the number of unstoppable enemies. The film follows a group of thirty-something friends whose “Pooka Challenge” accidentally goes viral and somehow begins physically manifesting slimmed down versions of the toy to slaughter those they deem “naughty.” How? Well, witches and Tibetan mysticism are mentioned in passing, but in practice the causes are unimportant—what matters is that the killer Pookas serve as a metaphor for internet cancel culture and urban legends. It’s an interesting concept, but one that ultimately doesn’t live up to its potential as the film relies too heavily on hit-or-miss comedic relief. But as an sporadically light-hearted ensemble comedy thriller, one could certainly do worse.
Into the Dark - season 2, episode 7: Pooka Lives! / 2020 — IMDb, TMDb
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Currently Watching: Pooka Lives!
Dinner: Chicken green chili mac
Current Mood: Chillin
Previously Watched:Pooka
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Chris: Part of Hulu’s Into the Dark series, the sequel to Pooka!, this film had quite a bit of the monster, file under films with toy-like monsters such as Willie’s Wonderland, perhaps it’s the “Candyland” horror subgenre, Watch: When Free.
Richie: I liked the first Pooka! Movie, the casting felt off with this second one, Watch: When Free.
Pooka Lives!: Directed by Alejandro Brugués. With Malcolm Barrett, Lyndie Greenwood, Felicia Day, Jonah Ray. A group of thirty-something fri
Pooka Lives! (2020) is the sequel to Pooka! (2018). While the first film was about an actor playing a costumed character, the sequel is about how the creator of the Pooka toy murdered her husband and set herself on fire. A group of friends create an online challenge around the idea of summoning Pooka which, through the power of believing things you read on the internet, becomes real.
I think I like the idea of stories having power, but this film is muddled. It’s about the internet, but only half-interested in that. Felicia Day is fantastic playing a wife and mother whose hobby is mysticism. The best moments are when the film is having fun, because it’s about a toy that kills people and that should be a fun movie. The ending is a total non-ending.