A repressed doll enthusiast finds her world turned inside-out when she restores a demonic baby doll.A repressed doll enthusiast finds her world turned inside-out when she restores a demonic baby doll.A repressed doll enthusiast finds her world turned inside-out when she restores a demonic baby doll.
Browse episodes
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaOriginally aired as a web series on Full Moon and amazon. The episodes were later re-edited into three Baby Oopsie movies: "The Feature," "Murder Dolls," and "Burn Baby Burn."
- ConnectionsFeatured in Bringing up Baby: Behind the Scenes of Baby Oopsie (2021)
Featured review
Sybil is a middle-aged overweight woman who answers a customer complaint line for a living -- and in her personal life, she deals with complaints too. It seems everyone is out to put her down, except for her sympathetic neighbor Kristy, and Ray-Ray a completely obnoxious neighbor who seems intent on inserting himself into Sybil's life. Sybil finds comfort in dolls and has created a web series to show her restoration work. One day, a mysterious package arrives containing a haggard Baby Oopsie doll, so Sybil gets to work on a restoration, not knowing that she's putting the lives of everyone around her in jeopardy.
I went into this not even realizing that Baby Oopsie was from Demonic Toys, and not really expecting much of anything, but I was shocked and delighted that it seemed like an upgrade over Full Moon's output of softcore porn and increasingly idiotic Evil Bong entries from the last 20 years.
The characters are compelling (even the ones who you love to hate), most of the performers act well, they packed in a little bit of production value, and there are some decent FX. Libbie Higgins is charming as the lead, Lynne McPherson devours the scenery as her tormentor, and Justina Armistead is deliciously over-the-top as Ray-Ray. These are not characters that you usually see in horror movies -- and if you do, you're certainly not meant to root for them -- they feel much more akin to something from a 1970s John Waters film. They're sad and sleazy, but totally lovable.
As for the title character, the puppets aren't great (particularly in the first season), but they do the job. Oopsie's personality is intentionally obnoxious but sorta like Chucky, she's weirdly cute. She gets a big physical upgrade in the second season, which also introduces us to Cowboy Roy and Frownie Clownie, her very-welcome partners-in-crime.
The story gets progressively sillier by the season 2 finale, but I can't complain because I'd become so invested in Sybil's strange saga that it was easy to roll with.
This was obviously a labor of love, and although it doesn't have the production values of the aforementioned Chucky series or even the earliest Demonic Toys (which was made when Charles Band was still utilizing Paramount's money), it's still highly recommended to anyone who enjoys the killer doll genre. It's best watched straight-through in a binge, either as six episodes or three feature films (both packagings are practically identical, the series just contains a few extra sets of credits plus an unnecessary recap show).
I went into this not even realizing that Baby Oopsie was from Demonic Toys, and not really expecting much of anything, but I was shocked and delighted that it seemed like an upgrade over Full Moon's output of softcore porn and increasingly idiotic Evil Bong entries from the last 20 years.
The characters are compelling (even the ones who you love to hate), most of the performers act well, they packed in a little bit of production value, and there are some decent FX. Libbie Higgins is charming as the lead, Lynne McPherson devours the scenery as her tormentor, and Justina Armistead is deliciously over-the-top as Ray-Ray. These are not characters that you usually see in horror movies -- and if you do, you're certainly not meant to root for them -- they feel much more akin to something from a 1970s John Waters film. They're sad and sleazy, but totally lovable.
As for the title character, the puppets aren't great (particularly in the first season), but they do the job. Oopsie's personality is intentionally obnoxious but sorta like Chucky, she's weirdly cute. She gets a big physical upgrade in the second season, which also introduces us to Cowboy Roy and Frownie Clownie, her very-welcome partners-in-crime.
The story gets progressively sillier by the season 2 finale, but I can't complain because I'd become so invested in Sybil's strange saga that it was easy to roll with.
This was obviously a labor of love, and although it doesn't have the production values of the aforementioned Chucky series or even the earliest Demonic Toys (which was made when Charles Band was still utilizing Paramount's money), it's still highly recommended to anyone who enjoys the killer doll genre. It's best watched straight-through in a binge, either as six episodes or three feature films (both packagings are practically identical, the series just contains a few extra sets of credits plus an unnecessary recap show).
- aardvarktheape
- Aug 14, 2023
- Permalink
- How long is Baby Oopsie: The Series?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Demonic Toys: Baby Oopsie
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime41 minutes
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content