distinctive and unsettling voice that perfectly matches his deranged mobster-man-child personality. It’s got a thick, aggressive Italian-American mobster accent — think classic wise-guy New Jersey / New York / Sopranos-style twang, with that nasal, gravelly edge and the kind of drawling threats that feel straight out of a 1950s gangster flick. Fans often compare it directly to Ralphie from The Sopranos (played by Joe Pantoliano), in terms of the voice type, the attitude, and the “mobster talking twang.” At the same time, there’s this weird, whiny, petulant man-baby quality layered on top — he slips into childish whining, tantrum-like outbursts, or creepy baby-talk vibes (especially when he’s upset or “regressing”). The voice actor (Daniel Brochu) delivers it with a lot of heavy breathing, snarling, and sudden shifts from menacing growls to almost infantile complaints, which makes it extra disturbing in the horror context. Overall, it’s a raspy, volatile, mid-range male voice that’s equal parts threatening tough-guy and pathetic overgrown toddler — super memorable and intentionally creepy to ramp up the unease when you hear him stalking around muttering or yelling threats.