Matt Mortem
Karloff is King
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2007
- Messages
- 18,517
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Chastain has worked with Andy Muschetti before in Mama. I'd say it's a done deal for her to be in the followup as Beverly.
Some may grumble at the tone, or the Spielberg/Amblin/Stranger Things vibe, which is unrelenting at times, but never anything other than fun or adorable. If you can find a better scene this year than Ben Hanscom and Beverly Marsh discussing New Kids on the Block, then paint my face and call me Penny-not-so-wise. IT is scarily good.
IT is quite extraordinary. The layered story, the drama, the comedy, the emotional horror, the amazing characters, the brilliant direction, and the fantastic acting make this film one surely worth your time. This is a smart movie. The creators have clearly thought through what they want to do with this production and have actually managed to do it. The complexity and smart direction of this re-imagining of the original classic make it even better than its predecessor. With so many bad or overrated films to have come out this summer, IT was truly a fresh and wonderful experience.
I think they're friends because he even visited her in her trailer while she was filming Molly's Game.Chastain has worked with Andy Muschetti before in Mama. I'd say it's a done deal for her to be in the followup as Beverly.
t:
That's creepy.How long before this movie triggers another wave of dip****s running about dressed as clowns..
Was that first wave ever attributed to anything?
Anybody that dresses up as a clown is a prick by default. But yeah, there will be stories of ***** dressing up scaring people at night and whatever.
Lovin what im hearing about Bill, people comparing him to Robert Englund is pretty damn exciting.
Clayton Davis
@AwardsCircuit
#ItMovie embargo drops at 2am ET. Look for the review then!
Visual flair and a solid cast keep Andy Muschietti's patchy Stephen King adaptation afloat.
It is a solid thriller that works best when it is most involved in its adolescent heroes' non-monster-related concerns. It will prove much more satisfying to King's legion of fans than Tower did. But it falls well short of the King-derived film it clearly wants to evoke, Stand By Me; and newcomers who were spoiled by the eight richly developed hours of Stranger Things may wonder what the big deal is supposed to be.
The new It feels self-contained, a full journey with a logical end point. It leaves room for the sequel--it had to--but if that sequel never got made (which seems unlikely after seeing Chapter 1), this would still be a great horror film.
When that title card at the end appears and the closing credits start to play, you're likely to feel relief--not just the tension leaving your body as it does at the end of any scary movie, but relief that 2017's It is the rare adaptation that does the original justice while crafting its own identity, too. The only people likely to feel disappointed are actual clowns, whose chosen profession is, unfortunately, not about to get more popular any time soon.
King's novel comes to sprawling life with plenty of scary moments to spare. The story, however, is anything but fresh.
At times, the movie excels at portraying the dread of children forced to confront a world indifferent to their concerns. But no matter how many times Pennywise leaps out from unexpected places, its impossible to shake the feeling that weve been here many times before.