
Let's cast our minds back a full decade, to 2014. That's when the first series of Funko's Horror Classics Mystery Minis was released, featuring very big figures,
like Pennywise or Leatherface, very medium figures, like Hannibal Lecter or Freddy Krueger, and very small figures, like Sam or Chucky.
This is, obviously, the original Chucky - nobody care enough about the remake version to bother with that. In 1989, an Australian financier named Christopher Skase tried to buy MGM/UA, the studio that made Child's Play; he didn't like horror movies, so the head of United Artists simply gave the rights to the producers. For free. So while one group has the right to make all the sequels they want, UA still owns the original film, and is free to remake it if they want - that's why all the movies and TV shows with the killer doll now use the "Chucky" name, while the one about the murderous digital assistant was "Child's Play."
The regular 2/24 Chucky figure is standing with his left hand held forward and a knife clutched backwards in his right. He's clean and pristine, wearing his blue overalls, and the strips on his cuffs and his shirt sleeves are painted very nicely. At first it seems odd that a character as small as Chucky is looking down, not up, but remember that most of his kills are after he's knocked people down, so that makes sense. There's a 1/144 chase variant available as well, which uses all the same molds, but paints some scars and stitches on his face and hands, for a Bride of Chucky look.
And hey, speaking of which...

