The Cuckoo Clock of Doom

 The Cuckoo Clock of Doom is a book, and later an adapted television program, from the Goosebumps series of books by R. L. Stine.

After the main character, Michael Webster, inadvertently affects the passage of time, he struggles to restore the corrupted timeline, which he must do before he vanishes completely!

Plot
The main character is Michael Webster, a twelve-year-old boy, telling the story from his perspective. He has a crush on Mona Deaton, his classmate. He begins by talking about his sister, Tara, who is always lying and getting him into trouble. Unfortunately, Tara never gets blamed for these things. On his 12th birthday, Tara ruins everything; she scratches his present, a new bicycle, tells his crush that Mike likes her (as well as opening all of Michael's presents ahead of him, including a CD she says that has great love songs on it), and purposely trips him while he is carrying his birthday cake, resulting in the cake splattering over Michael's face.

A few days later, his father purchases an antique cuckoo clock from a local store, Anthony's Antiques, that is supposed to have one flaw. He'd been admiring the clock for fifteen years. It's been said that if a person can figure out the clock's secret, it can be used to go back in time. Tara fools around with the clock, and her father gets very angry. This gives Michael an idea on how to get back at Tara. That night, when the clock strikes midnight, Michael sneaks downstairs and touches the cuckoo's head and twists it around backwards. He hopes this will get Tara in trouble for sure.

Apparently, this little act is the secret to going back in time. Michael wakes up and realizes that it's his 12th birthday all over again. At midnight, he tries to turn the head back to normal, but he realizes that the clock hasn't been bought yet. He heads back to bed, and wakes up a few days earlier. He remembers the day was when his frog costume for the play "The Frog Prince" gets its zipper stuck. He tries to change events by not going upstairs after walking like a robot up to his room (implying that the events would happen one way or another) then forcing himself to stop and walk back downstairs, but the girls arrive and although he tries to get out of it, they talk him into doing it anyway.

So he decides this time he'd lock the door. He forgets that the lock is broken because it was fixed on his birthday and the girls see him in his underwear just like originally. The next day is worse. He has a generally bad day at school, having getting beaten to a pulp by star athlete Kevin Flowers, after Tara sneaks Kevin's favorite cap into Michael's backpack. He starts to worry, and tries to tell his family. They trick Michael by saying things and walking backwards. He realizes when Tara calls him a moron [she say norom because they are doing it backwards]. He also realizes that things are going to get worse. When he wakes up the next morning, he doesn't notice anything different. But when he walks in the door of his classroom, he realizes the truth: he's back in third grade!

Michael finds himself disgusted by how immature his friends are and goes to sleep while thinking that he might be erased for good. But through the next day, he notices he has much more freedom than before and isn't being pushed by fate into embarrassment. The next day after that, Michael is in second grade. After Tara pokes him in the eye, he wonders what the pre-Tara years were like since his doesn't remember much from before age five. That afternoon, he heads over to Anthony's Antiques, only to find it closed. He attempts to break a window with a brick, but his dad catches him and takes him home, criticizing him of going on the bus alone, but Michael butters his dad up so that he wouldn't be to upset. He tries to talk his dad about the clock and he comments that he's been saving up for years to buy it.

The next day, he wakes up and notices he's back in his old bedroom (now Tara's room). Also, he's five years old, and thus, in kindergarten. He is bored and inattentive, faced with problems such as tying his shoes (and since he still has the brain and mind power of a 12-year-old, he does it very easily). The next day he wakes up a year younger, his four year old self is taken to nursery school. He confuses his young friends with his teenage level logic like when he climbs a tree and when they taunt him for being scared, he replies "I'm climbing the stupid tree" and says that means he's not scared, he even goes on to break his arm again as he did in nursery school.

The next morning, Mike wakes up in what he thinks is prison, until he realizes he can barely walk. He soon realizes he's a baby, wearing a diaper. Unable to escape his crib because of his weakened muscles, and unable to talk properly, he feels trapped. After having a bottle-feeding, a diaper change, and a minute in the baby pen, Michael starts to feel like he will never get to the clock and that this day as a baby might be his last, and even if not, he'd be too young to do anything on his last day where logically he'd be a newborn.

His mother takes him to see his "daddy" at work, and Michael realizes this is his chance. His parents are heading into Anthony's Antiques. While his parents look for a new kitchen table, he crawls quickly towards the cuckoo clock. Just as it rings for a 12th time, he grabs the head and twists it forward again, then sets the year dial to 1995, accidentally knocking an unknown year off in the process. In a bright flash of light, Michael is taken back to the morning of his 12th birthday!

Not quite the present, but close enough, Michael is almost happy to see Tara again, but he can't seem to find her. During his birthday without Tara, his bike isn't scratched, his birthday cake is actually eaten and Mona's best friend tells Michael that Mona has a crush on him. A few days later, the clock is delivered and Michael finds the clock's defect; its year dial is now without 1988 (the year Tara was born), preventing Tara from coming into existence when Michael returned to the present. (Post-2003 reprints of the book replace the year 1988 with 1996.)

However, Michael assures that later he'll go back and get Tara, eventually... (though, given the humiliation Tara put Michael through earlier in the book, it can be deduced that Michael will never go back in time to get his sister back).

Television Episode Trivia

 * R.L. Stine said that this was his favorite book in the series.
 * One of two episodes whose opening title appeared in white rather than green. The other one is The Girl Who Cried Monster.


 * While in the televised version Michael Webster experience being 12, 6 and a baby in the past, the original story has him experience 12, 3rd grade, 2nd grade, kindergarten, nursery school and being a baby. Also, he doesn't experience getting beaten up by Kevin Flowers or being seen in his underwear.


 * This episode failed to get on a DVD or VHS.


 * The second time Michael goes through his birthday, his mom asks him to help her with his cake. When he goes to her, you see they're outside, but the first time of Michael's birthday, they were inside.


 * In the scene where Michael is dreaming, he opens the door to the room the Cuckoo clock is in and begins to scream. But we hear the scream a split second before his mouth opens. Also, his dream is different, it's not of a scary version of his birthday but the clock with Tara's head for a cuckoo chases him.


 * The first time when Michael's dad tells Tara not to touch the clock, you see she has bangs on her forehead, but when she turns around to stick her tongue out at Michael, her bangs are gone. The dad is also visibly more upset than in the book.


 * This episode was adapted into Goosebumps Presents Book #2.


 * This episode, along with The Girl Who Cried Monster, on their original premieres had a special opening theme in which there was a ten-second remix when R.L. Stine is walking through the grass with the briefcase. When the G passes the dog, that part of the music is played with a different instrument. There were also different scenes from the show when the door opened.


 * When Michael looks in the mirror at age 6, his scream and facial expression is exactly the same as Macaulay Culkin's scream in the Home Alone movies.


 * His dad is a lot angrier at finding him at Anthony's Antiques than in the book. Later on, when he's brought back to the present, it's the actual present, and he gets the same scolding from his dad that Tara got earlier.. Michael being happy to see his parents again catches his dad off guard.


 * Tara's bedroom is his dad's office and not Michael's old bedroom.