
We’re back with more of the creepy clown Pennywise and the Losers Club kids who are now all grown up. IT chapter 2 feels a bit disconnected to me with issues bringing the story to a solid close at certain points, but still has that creepy make you jump factor. Overall it has solid performances from the actors, but by no means out does it’s 2017 hit of chapter one.
With the constant flashbacks throughout the film, it gives a very broken feeling to the overall story and doesn’t have a smooth transition like chapter one. The first half of IT chapter two rushes a bit as it introduces all the adults of the Losers Club. Yes, all the kids are now adults, and they have come back to kill Pennywise once and for all!
After you get introduced to all the adults of the Losers Club, the speed of the overall story slow down a ton and you get a flashback of the young Losers Club in a clubhouse scene that wasn’t part of the first film. The young actors may only play smaller supporting roles in chapter two, but just like the first film, they did an absolutely amazing job! Even though chapter two focuses on the adult Losers Club, the characters to me just didn’t have the same impact that the kids did in the previous film.
All of the adult Losers Club, however, did have a natural chemistry on screen together that didn’t feel manufactured from a script. They all had a genuine affection for one another, just like they had all been friends for most of their lives. Each of the adults has their own unique fears they are still facing having survived the onslaught of horror from the first film. I just wish the story would have been pulled together in a more seamless way instead of so sporadic as it jumps around way too much between the flashbacks, and I think drops a lot of the meat of the story.
A lot of the film does focus on the adults splitting up on a mission to go find items from their childhood that they need to take on Pennywise. This is where we begin to see a lot of flashbacks from their childhood, which bring new scenes from that summer they met Pennywise in the first film. IT chapter two has a long runtime of almost three hours and it can feel like a three-hour film at times as well.
IT chapter two had a ton more CGI than the first film did which was disappointing as it didn’t feel as nostalgic as the first film did. The CGI wasn’t the best either and really pulled away from the enjoyment of such an epic horror classic. On the plus side, the film had some truly amazing scary moments that made up for some of the sporadic plots.
Overall I really enjoyed the film but was also disappointed as I was wanting more of that feeling we got with IT chapter one. Even with the great performances from all the adult and teen actors, the overall story and use of flashbacks, and the fact they just never seemed to really find a good footing to land the plane took too much away to give this story it’s epic finale it deserved.
One of the most iconic horror characters in history has got to be Stephen King’s IT and the first ti
Speaking of those childhood memories, let’s talk about the story of the Losers Club, those seven kids who got locked into a summer nightmare back in 1989. Filled with disappearance after disappearance of young people throughout the small town of Derry, Maine these seven kids have a whole host of fears they have to tackle and face, along with that clown named Pennywise, now played by Bill Skarsgard who brings a whole new personification of scary to this story!
IT spends a significant amount of its lengthy running time on each of The Losers’ Club’s personal experiences with Pennywise in sequences that are both gruesome and horror inducing. One downfall to the film is the repetition of how each kid begins to face their specific “Phobia” and how they resolve it. The typical horror movie, oh look something scary down that hallway moment, where someone wonders off alone to go check it out. Pennywise being a monster clown, of course, takes advantage of each of those perfectly timed moments where someone wonders off alone to invoke fear and torment each of the kids. But even if you notice the pattern, each set piece is different enough to be scary and brings each character a well deserved moment of terror in the film.