USA. 1991.
Crew
Director – David DeCoteau, Screenplay – C. Courtney Joyner, Based on an Idea by Charles Band, Producers – David DeCoteau & John Schouweiler, Photography – Adolfo Bartoli, Original Puppetmaster Score – Richard Band, Puppet Effects – David Allen Productions, Makeup Effects – David Barton, Production Design – Billy Jett. Production Company – Full Moon Productions.
Cast
Guy Rolfe (Andre Toulon), Richard Lynch (Major Kraus), Ian Abercrombie (Dr Hess), Kristopher Logan (Lieutenant Erich Stein), Aron Eisenberg (Peter Hertz), Sarah Douglas (Elsa Toulon), Walter Gotell (General Mueller), Matthew Faison (Hans Hertz)
Plot
In Berlin in 1941, puppetmaster Andre Toulon attracts Nazi attention with his puppet show that mocks Adolf Hitler. The German scientist Dr Hess is working on a formula to create zombie Stormtroopers. When an officious Nazi adjutant photographs Toulon’s living dolls, Hess determines to get the formula used to animate them. When Gestapo Major Kraus goes to apprehend Toulon, Toulon’s beloved wife Elsa is shot. Toulon then swears revenge against those responsible.
This was the third in the series of films made by Full Moon Entertainment that began with Puppetmaster (1989). (See below for other titles). While the preceding two entries had been cast in the present-day, this was the first of the films to take the story back in time and deal with the Puppetmaster Andre Toulon himself. The Bands’ have handed direction over to David DeCoteau, a director who had made some of the cheapest and worst films under their pre-Full Moon label Empire, including the infamous Creepozoids (1987) and Sorority Babes at the Slimeball Bowl-o-Rama (1987). (See below for David DeCoteau’s other genre films).
Puppetmaster III: Toulon’s Revenge has a basic B-movie competence, no more than that. Less care has been taken with the puppet effects than in previous entries and these are only so-so. On the plus side is Guy Rolfe, who also played a toymaker in the Bands’ Dolls (1987), who gives a dignified performance as Toulon. Richard Lynch also makes for a convincing Nazi. The film was made on location in the Bands’ usual shooting grounds of Rumania, which makes for a passable Nazi Germany.

The other Puppetmaster films are: Puppetmaster (1989), Puppet Master II (1990), Puppet Master IV (1993), Puppet Master V: The Final Chapter (1995), Curse of the Puppet Master (1998), Retro Puppetmaster (1999), Puppet Master: The Legacy (2003), Puppet Master vs Demonic Toys (2004), Puppet Master: Axis of Evil (2010), Puppet Master X: Axis Rising (2012), Puppet Master: Axis Termination (2017) and Puppet Master: Doktor Death (2022), as well as the spinoff Blade: The Iron Cross (2020).
Trailer here