
Defense attorney Jennifer Garrick buys a Pinocchio puppet taken from a condemned serial killer. Her pre‑teen daughter Zoe thinks it’s a birthday gift and quickly bonds with it. Soon, mysterious accidents strike anyone who opposes Zoe. While Zoe blames the doll, her therapist doubts it, and the puppet promises to behave only if Zoe cuts its strings.
Does Pinocchio’s Revenge have end credit scenes?
No!
Pinocchio’s Revenge does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of Pinocchio’s Revenge, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

Larry Cedar
District Attorney

Ron Canada
Barry

Todd Allen
David Kaminsky

James W. Quinn
Paramedic

Sal Viscuso
Jail Guard

Ed Bernard
Jail Guard

Verne Troyer
Pinocchio

Janet MacLachlan
Judge Allen

Rosalind Allen
Jennifer Garrick

Rob Hartz
Patrolman

Aaron Lustig
Dr. Edwards

Shelley Robertson
Nurse

Ian Gregory
Prison Chaplain

Thomas Wagner
Homicide Detective

Sarah Kaite Coughlan
School Teacher

Ivan Gueron
Rookie Patrolman

Lewis van Bergen
Vincent Gotto

Dick Beals
Pinocchio (voice)

Robert Winley
Biker

Brittany Alyse Smith
Zoe Garrick

Candace McKenzie
Sophia
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Challenge your knowledge of Pinocchio’s Revenge with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
Who is the defense attorney determined to prove Vincent Gotto's innocence?
Jennifer Garrick
Zoe Garrick
Sophia
Dr. Edwards
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of Pinocchio’s Revenge, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
Jennifer Garrick, Rosalind Allen, is a tenacious defense attorney who takes on the case of Vincent Gotto, Lewis van Bergen, a convicted child murderer she believes is not guilty and possibly hiding the real culprit. The courtroom drama soon gives way to a unsettling, almost supernatural trail when a large Pinocchio-type puppet—buried by Gotto in his son’s grave—turns up as belated evidence that she requisitioned for examination. Intending to scrutinize the puppet for a possible clue, Jennifer brings it home, hoping it might unlock the truth behind the crime and spare Gotto from execution. The moment the puppet enters their house, it pulls into sharp focus the fragile line between justice and obsession, and it unsettles everyone who crosses its path.
Zoe Garrick, Brittany Alyse Smith, Jennifer’s emotionally fragile daughter, becomes inexplicably drawn to the puppet. What begins as innocent curiosity soon spirals into something darker: Zoe treats Pinocchio as a confidant, a silent companion who understands her fears, and the house begins to tilt under the weight of this uneasy bond. The puppet’s presence sharpens Zoe’s mood swings and amplifies the family’s unease, turning familiar rooms into stages for growing tension and suspicion. A schoolyard bully is pushed in front of a bus, an accident Zoe hastily blames on Pinocchio as if the puppet itself were acting to protect her. The incident deepens the rift between Jennifer’s professional duties and the private chaos unfolding at home.
David Kaminsky, Todd Allen, Jennifer’s boyfriend, is left to babysit Zoe when the family is pulled into turmoil. He’s knocked down the basement stairs during a tense moment, but is saved when Zoe makes a timely 9-1-1 call. The near-tragedy tightens the web of fear around the Garrick household and amplifies the sense that something unseen is orchestrating the events around them.
During a therapy session, Zoe begins speaking with Pinocchio about who is to blame for David’s accident, each side pointing fingers at the other. Jennifer and Dr. Edwards, Aaron Lustig, watch the exchange through a video feed and realize that Zoe isn’t simply talking to a doll—she seems to be talking to herself, or to a split version of herself mediated by the puppet. The scene intensifies the mystery and blurs the line between possession and psychology, forcing Jennifer to confront the possibility that her child is unraveling in real time.
That night, Pinocchio convinces Zoe to set him free, promising to confess to David about causing the accident if Zoe will release him. Zoe agrees, cutting the puppet’s strings, and the duo heads toward the hospital in pursuit of truth and redemption. In a chilling sequence told from a first-person perspective, an unseen intruder enters David’s hospital room and unplugs life support, killing him. When Zoe denies visiting the hospital and pins David’s death on Pinocchio, Jennifer grows increasingly unsettled and locks the puppet in the trunk of her car.
Left in the care of Sophia, Candace McKenzie, Zoe’s babysitter, the night grows darker still. Sophia reminds Zoe that she once gave Pinocchio a conscience in the form of a cricket, a detail that foreshadows the strange logic at work. Zoe searches for the cricket only to find it killed, and Sophia is attacked and killed by a figure wielding a fireplace poker. Jennifer returns home to a scene of horror: Sophia lies dead, Zoe stands in a dim hallway, and Jennifer’s attempt to confront Zoe ends with Zoe fleeing into the shadows. In a tense confrontation, Jennifer is struck by the poker and watches in horror as Zoe appears in the doorway, her face eerily calm.
Zoe explains that she managed to wrest the poker away from Pinocchio, but before Jennifer can press for answers, the girl vanishes. Jennifer turns to face Pinocchio, and the puppet—now menacingly real in the room—turns toward her and attacks with a knife. A desperate chase through the house follows, ending when Jennifer hurls Pinocchio through a glass coffee table. In a final, unsettling twist, Zoe seems to have swapped places with the puppet, lying where Pinocchio once stood. The film closes on a catatonic Zoe being committed, while Jennifer pledges not to give up on her recovery, and Dr. Edwards weighs in with a chilling line that lingers in the room:
I hope not, for your sake, I hope not.
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