The Fuzzies is gearing up to hit Digital on May 1, and itโ€™s coming in hot with felt, foam, and a mean streak a mile wide. Terror Films Releasing is backing the chaos, with Josh Funk and Dustin Vaught steering this thing straight into the fires of childhood Hell.

A group of friends reunite at the estate of a recently deceased childhood companion. Bit of grief, bit of nostalgia, probably a drink or two, and then the puppets show up. Not cute. Not friendly. Very much alive, and very much done pretending theyโ€™re part of a childrenโ€™s TV show.

What follows looks like a full-blown meltdown of Saturday morning innocence; bright colours, stitched smiles, and dead-eyed mascots turning the place into their own personal playground. Only now the games come with consequences, and nobodyโ€™s getting a participation trophy, just a front-row seat to whatever these things decide to do next.

The film leans hard into practical puppetry and stop-motion weirdness, giving it that handmade, slightly off-kilter texture where everything feels just a little too real. Starring Rocรญo de la Grana, Baylee Toney, Dustin Vaught, and Gordy Cassell, The Fuzzies leave the cast trapped in a nightmare held together by thread, spite, and Satan’s own arts-and-crafts.

Funk describes the film as a love letter to old-school childrenโ€™s television, the kind with cheerful sets and big personalities. Only here, that warmth has completely curdled. The comfortโ€™s gone. Whatโ€™s left is something twitchy, unpredictable, and not interested in playing nice.

The Fuzzies lands May 1 across platforms including Vudu, Amazon, Tubi, and Chilling.


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